CNBC Business News Update - Market Open: Stocks Lower, Bond Yields Higher, Fed Minutes Out This Afternoon 2/19/25
Episode Date: February 19, 2025From Wall Street to Main Street, the latest on the markets and what it means for your money. Updated regularly on weekdays, featuring CNBC expert analysis and sound from top business newsmakers. Ancho...red by CNBC's Jessica Ettinger.
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I'm Jessica Edinger, CNBC. Bond yields are higher, stocks are lower this morning. The Dow down 182
points, almost a half percent being led lower by shares of Home Depot, down almost two percent.
The S&P 500 index down 12 points, coming off a record high at the open. And the Nasdaq is down
27 points, checking shares of Nvidia. Checking shares of NVIDIA,
they're a little higher this morning, up three-tenths of one percent.
We expect a lot of choppiness in the market. The negatives are the policy and regulatory
uncertainty and the government spending reductions. And we are going to start seeing
how that starts to impact the real economy here in the coming months. So we expect
a lot of choppiness. North Stars Nimrit Kang on CNBC. The minutes from the last Fed meeting will
be out this afternoon. Investors will comb through those for hints on whether another interest rate
cut could be on the table. Crude oil popping higher again today, as is gold, which is near
its intraday record high. President Trump floating 25% tariffs on auto,
drug, and chip imports as soon as April 2nd. Some investors are spooked, some are shaking it off as
just talk. EV maker Nikola filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. Homebuilder Toll Brothers
shares were lower on an earnings miss for the last quarter it delivered just under 2,000 new homes falling short of expectations more people applied for mortgages to buy homes last
week than the same week last year the average rate on a 30-year fixed home loan is seven percent
according to mortgage news daily retail earnings will start to come out. One expert says there are headwinds ahead. He's calling it RIFT.
That is rates, inflation, FX and tariffs. These are the policy risks that we think retailers will
talk about when they give their 2025 guidance. We expect that most retailers will give a cautious
outlook. Now, as you said, we do think it was a good holiday, but we think it behooves retailers
to set a relatively low bar for 2025.
DA Davidson research analyst Michael Baker on CNBC. The Quaker Oats Pearl Milling Company
pancake and waffle mix recall now bumped up to the highest level. The FDA says the class one
recall means the product could cause health issues, including death. It contains undeclared milk.
Jessica Ettinger, CNBC.
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