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Wall Street closes a record-breaking week with a quiet finish

Currency traders watch monitors near a screen showing the Korea Composite Stock Price Index (KOSPI), top left, and the foreign exchange rate between U.S. dollar and South Korean won at the foreign exchange dealing room of the Hana Bank headquarters in Seoul, South Korea, Friday, July 18, 2025. (AP Photo/Ahn Young-joon)

Key Points

  • Asian shares were mostly higher on Friday, with Hong Kong’s Hang Seng up 0.7% and Shanghai’s Composite up 0.3%, while Japan’s Nikkei edged down 0.1% amid uncertainty ahead of Sunday’s upper house election.
  • Taiwan’s Taiex climbed 0.9%, driven by a 61% surge in quarterly net income at Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co., which cited strong AI demand.
  • Wall Street hit record highs as the S&P 500, Dow and Nasdaq rose on better‐than‐expected earnings from companies like PepsiCo and strong gains in AI-related stocks such as Nvidia.
  • Robust US economic data—including stronger retail sales, fewer unemployment claims and solid manufacturing growth—supports expectations that the Federal Reserve will keep interest rates on hold.
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NEW YORK (AP) — Wall Street closed its third winning week in the last four with a quiet finish on Friday.

The S&P 500 edged down by a whisper, less than 0.1%, after setting its all-time high the day before. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 142 points, or 0.3%, and the Nasdaq composite edged up by less than 0.1% to add its own record.

Norfolk Southern chugged 2.5% higher after an AP source said it’s talking with Union Pacific about a merger to create the largest railroad in North America, one that would connect the East and West coasts. Any such deal, though, would likely face tough scrutiny from U.S. regulators. Union Pacific’s stock fell 1.2%.

The heaviest weight on the market, meanwhile, was Netflix, which fell 5.1% despite reporting a stronger-than-expected profit. Analysts said it wasn’t a surprise given the stock had already soared 43% for the year so far coming into the day, six times more than the gain for the S&P 500.

American Express likewise delivered a better-than-expected profit report, but its stock lost 2.3%. Analysts pointed to slowing growth in some underlying trends, such as the number of cards it issued.

Exxon Mobil sank 3.5% and also tugged on the market. It had been challenging Chevron’s $53 billion deal to buy Hess, but an arbitration ruling in Paris about Hess assets off Guyana’s coast allowed the buyout to go through. Chevron fell 0.9% after losing an early gain.

Stronger-than-expected profit reports for the spring did help several stocks rally. Charles Schwab climbed 2.9%, Regions Financial jumped 6.1% and Comerica added 4.6%.

All told, the S&P 500 slipped 0.57 to 6,296.79 points. The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 142.30 to 44,342.19, and the Nasdaq composite rose 10.01 to 20,895.66.

In the bond market, Treasury yields eased after a report suggested U.S. consumers may be feeling less fearful about coming inflation. They’re bracing for inflation of 4.4% in the year ahead, down from last month’s projection of 5%, according to preliminary results from a University of Michigan survey.

That’s important because expectations for high inflation can feed into behaviors that create a vicious cycle that keeps inflation high. Overall sentiment among consumers, meanwhile, was a hair better than economists expected but still well below its historical average.

“Consumers are unlikely to regain their confidence in the economy unless they feel assured that inflation is unlikely to worsen, for example if trade policy stabilizes for the foreseeable future,” according to Joanne Hsu, the survey’s director.

The yield on the 10-year Treasury sank to 4.42% from 4.47% late Thursday. The two-year Treasury yield, which more closely tracks expectations for what the Federal Reserve will do with its short-term rates, also dropped. It fell to 3.87% from 3.91%.

A top Fed official, Gov. Chris Waller, said late Thursday that the Fed should cut its overnight interest rate as soon as its next meeting in a couple weeks. That follows sharp criticism from President Donald Trump, who has been castigating the Fed for holding interest rates steady this year instead of cutting them, as it did late last year.

Lower rates could give the economy a boost, and Trump has implied they could help the U.S. government save money on its debt payments, though that’s uncertain. The interest rates Washington has to pay on its longer-term debt can depend more on what bond investors think than on what the Fed does, and they can even move in opposite directions.

The chair of the Fed, meanwhile, has been insisting that he wants to see more data about how Trump’s tariffs will affect the economy and inflation before the Fed makes its next move. The downside of lower interest rates is that they can give inflation more fuel, and prices may already be starting to feel the upward effects of tariffs.

Traders on Wall Street think it’s much more likely that the Fed will resume cutting interest rates in September, rather than later this month, according to data from CME Group.

In stock markets abroad, indexes were mixed across Europe and Asia. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng jumped 1.3%, but Tokyo’s Nikkei 225 slipped 0.2% ahead of an election for the upper house of parliament on Sunday that could wipe out the ruling coalition’s upper house majority.

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This version corrects the change in the Hang Seng index in Hong Kong to 1.3%.

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AP Writers Teresa Cerojano and Matt Ott contributed.

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