ASX set to rise, Wall Street gets AI boost; Tesla teases new product

2 hours ago 2
By Stan Choe

October 7, 2025 — 5.23am

Wall Street is ticking toward more records on Monday, and technology stocks keep leading the way.

The S&P 500 added 0.5 per cent, coming off its latest all-time high. The Dow Jones was down 30 points, or 0.1 per cent, in mid-afternoon trade, and the Nasdaq composite was 0.8 per cent higher.

The Australian sharemarket is set to rise, with futures at 5.06am AEDT pointing to a gain of 24 points, or 0.3 per cent, at the open. The ASX edged lower on Monday. The Australian dollar was fetching US66.17¢ at 5.15am AEDT.

US stocks got some lift from the easing pressure in the bond market.

US stocks got some lift from the easing pressure in the bond market.Credit: Bloomberg

Advanced Micro Devices helped lead the market and soared 26.1 per cent after announcing a deal where OpenAI will use its chips to power artificial-intelligence infrastructure. As part of the deal, OpenAI could own up to 160 million shares of AMD if it hits certain milestones.

A frenzy around AI has been one of the main reasons Wall Street has been hitting record after record, though that’s also raising worries that prices have potentially shot too high. Much of the furor around AI in the last couple of weeks has come from OpenAI, which has quickly grown into a $US500 billion ($756 billion) company, announcing deals with businesses around the world to develop more AI infrastructure.

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Another chip company, Nvidia, announced a deal last month where it would invest $US100 billion in OpenAI as part of a partnership, creating criticism that the AI investment pipeline was beginning to appear like a circle. Nvidia slipped 1.1 per cent following the AMD announcement. Because it’s the most valuable stock on Wall Street, Nvidia was one of the heaviest weights on the S&P 500.

Outside of tech, Comerica jumped 14.3 per cent after Fifth Third Bancorp agreed to buy its rival in an all-stock deal valued at $US10.9 billion. The combination would create the country’s ninth-largest bank. Fifth Third’s stock was virtually unchanged.

Tesla rose 4.3 per cent after social-media postings by the electric-vehicle maker hinted at a possible product unveiling coming on Tuesday.

Verizon Communications fell 5.1 per cent after the telecom replaced its chief executive. Dan Schulman, a director at the company and former CEO of PayPal, is taking over for Hans Vestburg.

Elsewhere on Wall Street, trading was relatively quiet as the stock market continues to largely ignore the US government’s shutdown. Past closures of the federal government have had minimal effect on the stock market or on the economy, and the bet on Wall Street is that something similar will happen again.

Politics are playing a more active role in stock markets abroad, as Japanese stocks soared and French stocks slumped following their latest political shake-ups.

Japan’s Nikkei 225 jumped 4.8 per cent after the country’s Liberal Democratic Party chose Sanae Takaichi as its leader. She was an ally of the late Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who pushed for lower interest rates and market-friendly policies.

The yen’s value dropped against the US dollar on expectations that Takaichi will boost spending, likely adding to inflationary pressures. That in turn helped push up stocks of Japanese exporters, whose products can become more attractive on the global market because of a cheaper yen.

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“Obviously, investors like what she has been saying and certainly today judging by the number of stocks that moved and which stocks moved, it seems like pretty much led by foreigners so far,” Neil Newman, head of strategy at Astris Advisory Japan, said about Takaichi.

In Paris, the CAC 40 index slumped 1.4 per cent following the resignation of France’s new prime minister.

Sébastien Lecornu resigned a day after he named his government, drawing a backlash across the political spectrum for his choice of ministers. French politics have been in disarray since President Emmanuel Macron called snap elections last year that produced a deeply fragmented legislature.

In the bond market, the yield on the 10-year Treasury rose to 4.16 per cent from 4.13 per cent late Friday.

The shutdown of the U.S. government likely means delays for U.S. economic reports scheduled for this week, though investors will have some earnings reports to comb through, including from Delta Air Lines, PepsiCo and Levi Strauss.

Despite the shutdown, the Federal Reserve will release minutes from its meeting last month, when it cut its benchmark interest rate for the first time this year. Much on Wall Street is riding on expectations that the Fed will continue cutting interest rates through this year and into next.

AP

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