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Dow closes at record high, S&P 500 logs winning month, as investors shake off government shutdown concerns

A trader reacts on the floor at the New York Stock Exchange in New York City, U.S., August 22, 2025.
Brendan McDermid | Reuters

Stocks closed higher on Tuesday as investors moved past worries of a potential U.S. government shutdown and logged an unusually strong September.

The S&P 500 closed up 0.41% at 6,688.46, while the Nasdaq Composite climbed 0.31% to finish at 22,660.01. The Dow Jones Industrial Average advanced 81.82 points, or 0.18%, to close at 46,397.89 — a fresh closing high.

The federal government is due to run out of funding at midnight. President Donald Trump said Tuesday about a shutdown that "nothing is inevitable, but I would say it's probably likely."

House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., also told CNBC Tuesday that he's "skeptical" that a lapse in funding can be averted by the deadline, saying that the outcome is in the hands of Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y. Jeffries, meanwhile, said on CNBC about Republicans that "if the government shuts down, it's their decision to do it."

For the most part, the stock market is taking the prospect of a government shutdown in stride. Historically speaking, stoppages have had a negligible impact on the market, as they seldom last for more than two weeks. However, some investors worry the impact on the U.S. economy could be especially harmful this time around, should the Trump administration go through with its threat of mass firings of federal workers, or if it lasts for longer than anticipated.

"When it comes to Washington, the market widely expected a shutdown to happen, so investors are largely sitting tight for now, but if this extends beyond two weeks, people will start to become more concerned," Adam Crisafulli of Vital Knowledge said.

Investors are already wary about a slowing labor market, the risk of stagflation and elevated stock valuation. If the government suspends operations, the Labor Department said it won't release the September nonfarm payrolls report as scheduled on Friday. A shutdown could also prompt rating agencies to rethink the strength of U.S. credit, which was downgraded in May by Moody's.

The jobs report is one of several upcoming key data releases that would provide crucial information about the direction of the economy ahead of the Federal Reserve's October policy meeting. The latest sign of economic strain arose Tuesday, when the September reading on consumer confidence came in lower than expected.

It's possible, however, that a delay in the report's release might actually be favorable to the market, according to Peter Corey, co-founder and chief market strategist at Pave Finance.

"This could spare the market the potential of seeing August's 22,000 payroll number sink below zero, as is likely given the statistics are already dangerously close," Corey said. "A delay would postpone any investor disappointment and give the market a chance to release more positive data in the interim to soften the impact."

Software stocks retreated Tuesday, with Paychex pulling back more than 1% following its quarterly results and Salesforce moving 3.3% lower. Nvidia was a bright spot during the session, rising in sympathy with CoreWeave. The latter, which is backed by Nvidia, announced a $14.2 billion artificial intelligence cloud infrastructure deal with Meta Platforms.

Tuesday's moves added to the major U.S. stock indexes' solid monthly gains for September. The S&P 500, which has averaged a 4.2% drop for the month over the last five years, increased more than 3% this month, and the Dow gained nearly 2%. The Nasdaq outperformed with a 5.6% gain in September.

Tuesday additionally brought the end of the third quarter. The broad market S&P 500 was up almost 8% quarter to date, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq notched a more than 11% quarterly gain. The blue-chip Dow was up more than 5% since the end of June, marking its fourth positive quarter of the last five.

Dow scores fresh record close

Stocks finished in positive territory on Tuesday, just hours before a possible government shutdown.

The S&P 500 rose 0.41% to finish at 6,688.46, while the Nasdaq Composite gained 0.31% to end at 22,660.01. The Dow Jones Industrial Average climbed 81.82 points, or 0.18%, to end the day at 46,397.89, a new closing high.

— Sean Conlon

Why the shutdown fight rests on Obamacare tax credits

An impasse over health care funding has put the federal government on track to shut down in a matter of hours.

The Affordable Care Act's enhanced premium tax credits — which millions of Americans have relied on since 2021 — have become a sticking point in the standoff.

Those enhanced credits, which were implemented amid the Covid-19 pandemic, lower the cost of health-insurance premiums paid by Obamacare enrollees and expand their eligibility requirements.

The subsidies are due to expire at the end of the year. Democrats are pressing Republicans, who hold narrow majorities in the House and Senate, to codify an extension of the credits into legislation to keep the government from shutting down starting Wednesday.

Republicans, however, insist that any discussions over extending the subsidies should take place after the shutdown crisis is averted.

That tension has raised questions over the future and cost of health care for the roughly 22 million Americans who rely on the subsidies.

Read more here.

— Erin Doherty

What the potential data block from the shutdown could mean for the Fed

The Marriner S. Eccles Federal Reserve building in Washington, DC, US, on Sunday, Jan. 12, 2025.
Samuel Corum | Bloomberg | Getty Images

As if the Federal Reserve's job isn't complicated enough, the expected shutdown in Washington, D.C., is about to make things worse.

Should the government cease nonessential operations at midnight, government economic reports, including the nonfarm payrolls report due out Friday, will not be released. Fed officials essentially will lose access to some of the most important tools they use to figure out their next moves on monetary policy.

With their next meeting just four weeks away, the timing is not good.

"For the Fed, the absence of timely labor market data would add a layer of complexity to decision-making at a particularly sensitive moment," said Lydia Boussour, senior economist at EY-Parthenon.

With the Fed inherently data dependent, not getting the kind of information policymakers rely on makes the job of deciding where interest rates should be set more complicated.

Read more.

— Jeff Cox

UiPath stock pops after company announces partnerships with OpenAI, Snowflake and Nvidia

Shares of automation software maker UiPath rose more than 8% Tuesday after the company announced partnerships with OpenAI, Snowflake and Nvidia that will allow the tech giants to incorporate UiPath's technology into their AI capabilities. UiPath also announced a conversational agent with voice interaction capabilities powered by Google's Gemini AI chatbot.

Tuesday's gains put UiPath on track for its highest close since Feb. 20, 2025, when shares closed at $14.17 apiece.

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UiPath stock performance over the past year.

Shares of the company, which went public in April 2021, have gained almost 7% year to date and added nearly 8% over the past three years.

— Pia Singh

Etsy shares fall a day after OpenAI partnership

Shares of Etsy fell more than 11% during midday trading Tuesday, a day after OpenAI announced a landmark partnership with the e-commerce company that led shares to close 16% higher in the previous session. OpenAI on Monday announced a new feature called Instant Checkout that will allow users to make single-item purchases directly from U.S. Etsy sellers through its AI chatbot ChatGPT. 

Despite the declines on Tuesday, some analysts took the partnership news as a bullish sign for Etsy's growth moving forward.

BTIG analyst Marvin Fong wrote in a note to clients that Etsy's partnership with OpenAI's ChatGPT puts the e-commerce site "at the leading edge of agentic commerce." He lifted his price target on Etsy by $9 to $81 to suggest shares have about 9% upside from the most recent close of $74.34 per share.

"Investors are clearly paying for more than just the immediate impact of this transaction," Fong wrote in the note. "Furthermore, we see ChatGPT's scale, the [total addressable market] unlock, future agentic innovation and the fact we viewed ETSY as undervalued to begin with as justifying today's price action."

— Pia Singh

Stocks making big moves midday include Semtech, Pfizer and more

A Pfizer logo is shown at a research facility in the La Jolla neighborhood of San Diego, California, U.S., Sept. 30, 2025.
Mike Blake | Reuters

Check out the companies making the biggest moves midday:

  • Semtech — The signal components maker rallied 8% after the company announced the launch of new optical receivers for AI networks alongside Poet Technologies. On top of that, Oppenheimer upgraded the stock to outperform following a meeting with management.
  • Credo Technology — Shares fell more than 1% after the connectivity components maker agreed to acquire Hyperlume privately held, which "provides microLED-based interconnects for use in hyperscale and AI-focused data centres."
  • Pfizer — The maker of Eliquis, a blood thinner, rose more than 3% after CNBC reported that the drugmaker and the Trump administration will announce an agreement to lower Medicaid drug prices. Pfizer would also win a three-year reprieve from planned pharmaceutical tariffs in return for expanding U.S. manufacturing.

Read more here.

— Fred Imbert

'I continue to see a modestly restrictive policy stance as appropriate,' Boston Fed President Collins says

Boston Federal Reserve President Susan Collins on Tuesday expressed support for the recent interest rate cut, but some skepticism on future moves as she sees continued threats from inflation.

Speaking in New York, the central bank policymaker noted risks to both higher inflation and a softening labor market that are keeping officials on their toes.

"In my view, a bit of easing was appropriate to address the recent shift in the balance of risks to our inflation and employment mandate," Collins said in prepared remarks. "But I continue to see a modestly restrictive policy stance as appropriate, as monetary policymakers work to restore price stability while limiting the risks of further labor market weakening."

Read more here.

— Jeff Cox

'Buy the shutdown,' policy analyst says

The US Capitol in Washington, DC, US, on Monday, Sept. 29, 2025.
Al Drago | Bloomberg | Getty Images

At least the historical track record suggests Wall Street has little to fear from a government shutdown, according to Ed Mills, Washington policy analyst at Raymond James.

The policy analyst found that the stock market typically brushed off funding disputes, with the S&P 500 on average higher by 3.2%, and small caps acting similarly. Technology tends to outperform at the beginning of a shutdown, he noted, while financials and utilities tend to do better near the end of one.

"We do think that this is an event that provides a lot of headline risk," Mills told CNBC's "The Exchange" on Monday. "But we would say if there's a market reaction here, buy the shutdown."

To be sure, the analyst noted the potential risks of a shutdown can worsen the longer it goes on. An extended shutdown that delays government data, and creates a fiscal drag on the economy, may mean this time could result in a different outcome.

— Sarah Min

Trump to announce deal with Pfizer to lower drug prices

President Donald Trump is set announce an agreement with Pfizer on Tuesday that will voluntarily sell the company's medications at lower prices.

The president is slated to announce a drug pricing deal with Pfizer at 11 a.m. ET, White House spokesperson Kush Desai said in a statement, adding that Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla will be in attendance.

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PFE, 1-day

Shares of Pfizer were last up more than 2%. Other stocks in the pharmaceutical industry were higher as well, with AbbVie and Amgen each up more than 1% and Merck higher by more than 2%.

— Annika Kim Constantino, Sean Conlon

Consumer confidence is lower than expected in September

A cashier handles money in Macy's Herald Square in Manhattan, New York.
Andrew Kelly | Reuters

Consumer confidence edged lower in September ahead of an expected data blackout caused by the looming federal government shutdown, the Conference Board reported Tuesday.

The board's headline confidence index registered a 94.2 reading, off 3.6 points from the August reading and below the Dow Jones estimate for 96.0. The reading was the lowest since April and comes with nonessential government operations slated to close at midnight.

In addition to the weakness on the main reading, the "present situation" index hit its lowest in a year.

Read more here.

— Jeff Cox

Exxon is the latest oil company to cut jobs amid crude slump

Darren Woods, CEO of Exxon Mobil Corporation, who faces a new activist fund campaign targeting the board he heads. "They are going to have to get more reliable on the results," says Peter McNally, energy analyst at research firm Third Bridge.
Brendan McDermid | Reuters

Exxon Mobil is cutting 2,000 positions worldwide as part of an ongoing restructuring plan, a company spokesperson confirmed to CNBC.

"To support the collaboration so critical to our success, we are aligning our global footprint with our operating model and bringing our teams together," the spokesperson said. Bloomberg first reported the news of the layoffs.

Exxon is the latest oil company to slash jobs as crude prices slump due to growing global supply. Chevron announed in February that it would cut up to 20% of its workforce. ConocoPhillips said earlier this month that it would cut up to 25% of its workforce.

U.S. crude oil prices have fallen nearly 13% this year as OPEC+ members increase production. U.S. crude was trading below $63 per barrel on Tuesday.

— Spencer Kimball

Stocks open lower ahead of shutdown deadline

Stocks began Tuesday's trading session in negative territory.

The S&P 500 declined 0.1% just after the opening bell, while the Nasdaq Composite pulled back 0.2%. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was just below the flatline, falling 14 points or 0.03%.

— Sean Conlon

CoreWeave pops on Meta deal

CoreWeave announced an agreement on Tuesday to provide Meta with $14.2 billion of artificial intelligence cloud infrastructure, sending shares nearly 10% higher in premarket trading.

"The agreement underscores that behind every AI breakthrough are the partnerships that make it possible," a CoreWeave spokesperson told CNBC.

Meta did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

— Ashley Capoot, Michelle Fox

Speaker Johnson says he's 'skeptical' a government shutdown can be avoided

Speaker of the House Mike Johnson, R-La., talks with reporters in the U.S. Capitol after the House passed a continuing resolution to fund the government into November, on Friday, September 19, 2025.
Tom Williams | Cq-roll Call, Inc. | Getty Images

House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., on Tuesday said that he isn't confident the U.S. government can avoid a shutdown ahead of the deadline at midnight.

"You know me, I'm an optimist, but I'm a little skeptical this morning," he said on CNBC's "Squawk Box," adding that whether the government is funded is "entirely up to" Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y.

Johnson also said that "there is no basis whatsoever for them to oppose" a funding bill.

Democrats have insisted that any continuing resolution should include an extension of enhanced Affordable Care Act tax credits.

— Sean Conlon

Stocks making premarket moves

Here are some of the names moving before the opening bell:

  • Firefly Aerospace — Shares of the space technology company tumbled 10% after one of its rocket boosters exploded during preflight testing at its Texas facility. No other facilities were affected, Firefly Aerospace said.
  • Wolfspeed — The semiconductor components maker's stock soared 23%, one day after rocketing almost 1,700%. Wolfspeed said Monday it successfully completed a financial restructuring and emerged from Chapter 11 protection.
  • Instacart — The grocery delivery company shed 2.6% following a downgrade at BTIG to neutral from buy. The investment bank cited stepped-up competition for the call.

To see more stocks moving in the premarket, read the full story here.

— Michelle Fox

Lutnick pushes for Taiwan to help the U.S. produce 50% of its chips

Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick speaks during a cabinet meeting with U.S. President Donald Trump in the Cabinet Room of the White House on August 26, 2025 in Washington, DC.
Chip Somodevilla | Getty Images News | Getty Images

The Trump administration is pushing Taipei to shift investment and chip production to the U.S. so that half of America's chips are manufactured domestically, in a move that could have implications for Taiwan's national defense. 

Washington has held discussions with Taipei about the "50-50" split in semiconductor production, which would significantly reduce American dependence on Taiwan, U.S. Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick told News Nation in an interview released over the weekend. 

Taiwan is said to produce over 90% of the world's advanced semiconductors, which, according to Lutnick, is cause for concern due to the island nation's distance from the U.S. and proximity to China. 

"My objective, and this administration's objective, is to get chip manufacturing significantly onshored — we need to make our own chips," Lutnick said. "The idea that I pitched [Taiwan] was, let's get to 50-50. We're producing half, and you're producing half." 

Read more.

— Dylan Butts

EchoStar rallies on report of wireless spectrum sale to Verizon

EchoStar soared 9% after Bloomberg News reported, citing sources, that the telecom company was in talks to sell some of its wireless spectrum to Verizon. The talks, according to the report, involve EchoStar's AWS-3 licenses, which are used for 5G wireless.

Verizon shares were flat in the premarket.

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SATS 5-day chart

— Fred Imbert

Where the major averages stand for the month and quarter

A small replica of the Charging Bull statue is seen on a street vendor stall outside the New York Stock Exchange on July 11, 2025.
Jeenah Moon | Reuters

Wall Street is set to wrap up a strong month and quarter, driven by gains in AI giants such as Nvidia and Oracle. Here's where the major U.S. stock benchmarks stand:

  • Dow: up 1.7% in September; up 5% in Q3
  • S&P 500: up 3.1% month to date; up 7.4% for the quarter
  • Nasdaq Composite: up 5.3% in September; up 10.9% in third quarter
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Major averages this month

— Fred Imbert

BMO's Brian Belski expects S&P 500 to continue posting gains next year

Chief investment strategist Brian Belski.
Scott Mlyn | CNBC

Tightening interest rates and strong earnings growth should keep powering the U.S. stock market higher, according to BMO Capital Markets chief investment strategist Brian Belski.

Belski, who late last week raised his year-end S&P 500 forecast to his bull case of 7,000, said on Monday that "2025 has set the table for 'Goldilocks' for 2026 and 2027."

Belski said earnings growth could be between 8% and 10% next year.

"What's wrong with stocks going up? It's actually a really, really good thing, number one," Belski said on CNBC's "Closing Bell." "We also have this notion of a lot of cash on the sidelines. We have a fourth quarter that, traditionally, when you see a market that's up 15% to 20% the first nine months of the year, the average return is like 5.6% going back to 1950 or so. So seasonality is involved. But also the believability of equities are back in terms of it working, and the believability of the U.S. market is to have some wherewithal is also back."

Belski said that inflation concerns could arise if the Federal Reserve ultimately cranks interest rates down too fast, but believes that stocks can still manage a so-called 'goldilocks' scenario with high single-digit returns next year.

— Pia Singh

Vail Resorts, Firefly Aerospace among stocks making the biggest moves in after-hours trading

A screen displays the Firefly Aerospace logo during the company's IPO at the Nasdaq MarketSite in New York City, U.S., August 7, 2025.
Jeenah Moon | Reuters

A handful of companies were moving after Monday's close. Take a look at the names below:

  • Shares of Vail Resorts dropped 2% in after-hours trading. The ski resorts operator posted a quarterly loss of $5.08 per share, while analysts polled by LSEG expected a loss of $4.73 per share. The company's revenue of $271 million also missed analysts' consensus expectations of $274 million.
  • Firefly Aerospace shares dropped about 12% after one of its rocket boosters exploded at its Texas facility during preflight testing. The company said it was assessing the impact of the incident on its booster test stand and "no other facilities were impacted."
  • Shares of the maker of AI-powered infrastructure software rose 3% after it exceeded Wall Street's estimates for its third quarter and raised its full-year guidance. Progress Software earned $1.50 per share, after adjustments, on revenue of $250 million. Analysts surveyed by LSEG expected earnings of $1.30 per share and $240 million in revenue.
  • Jefferies Financial Group shares dropped about 1.3% even though the company beat on top and bottom lines, reporting revenue that jumped roughly 22% from a year earlier while its investment banking advisory business hit a record. Jefferies earned $1.01 per share on revenue of $2.05 billion, while analysts polled by LSEG expected 80 cents per share in profits on $1.92 billion in revenue. "Based on our dialogue and our backlog, we believe that private-equity activity is strengthening," Jefferies President Brian Friedman told the Wall Street Journal.

— Pia Singh

U.S. stock futures open little changed

Shortly after 6 p.m. ET on Monday, futures tied to the S&P 500 and Nasdaq-100 futures each dipped less than 0.1%. Futures tied to the Dow Jones Industrial Average edged lower by 18 points, or less than 0.1%.

— Pia Singh