The S&P 500 and Dow Jones Industrial Average notched record high closes on Thursday after Nvidia’s quarterly report fell short of investors’ high expectations but confirmed that spending related to artificial intelligence infrastructure remains strong. Canada’s main stock index closed almost flat, as investors took profits on gains seen over the last few days, especially in banking stocks.
Shares of Nvidia dipped 0.8% after Sino-U.S. trade uncertainties prompted the leading AI chip designer to exclude potential China sales from its quarterly forecast late on Wednesday.
Investors viewed Nvidia’s report, including a 56% surge in quarterly revenue, as confirmation that demand related to AI technology remains strong, supporting a rally in AI-related stocks that has propelled Wall Street to record highs in recent years.
Other AI heavyweights gained, with Alphabet adding 2%, Amazon up 1% and chipmaker Broadcom rising almost 3%.
“Nvidia is such an outlier that to say it was a disappointing print is only against the bar of borderline impossible expectations,” said Ross Mayfield, an investment strategy analyst at Baird. “It’s clear that the primary structural driver of this market, which is AI, is not going anywhere or cooling down.”
The S&P 500 climbed 0.32% to end the session at 6,501.86 points, reaching a record high close for a second straight day. The Nasdaq gained 0.53% to 21,705.16 points, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.16% to 45,636.90 points, exceeding its previous record high close on August 22.
The S&P/TSX composite index edged slightly higher to close up 0.01% to 28,434.80 points, hovering around record high levels.
Canada’s main index has returned 14.5% this year with over 4.5% coming in August alone after fears around U.S. tariffs receded, hopes of a trade deal increased and investors and analysts realized the worst-case scenario of the impact of tariffs on the Canadian economy is likely unfounded.
The financials index gave up some gains after two solid days of upswing and the energy index, composed of oil and gas stocks, stayed volatile. The index, which accounts for almost a third of the weight in the composite index and is its biggest constituent, lost 0.22% at market close despite lenders TD Bank and CIBC topping analysts’ expectations. Both the lenders beat profit forecasts and posted lower than expected loan loss provisions. Shares of CIBC were up roughly 2%, while TD Bank lost 4.5%.
The Bank of Montreal , the Bank of Nova Scotia and the Royal Bank of Canada had posted similar stellar earnings this week, boosting investor hopes the local economy was getting better after an initial impact of tariffs.
Statistics Canada will release second quarter GDP number on Friday along with an advanced estimate for July growth and investors will be watching that closely to gauge the health of the economy in the coming months and prospects of a rate cut in Canada next month.
The TSX energy sector was up 0.4% as gains in the crude oil price late in the day reversed losses seen for most of the day, while consumer discretionary shares led the sectoral losses with a 0.08% fall.
On Wall Street, seven of the 11 S&P 500 sector indexes rose, led by communication services, up 0.94%, followed by a 0.68% gain in energy.
Nike slid 0.2% after the sports apparel seller said it was cutting less than 1% of its corporate workforce as it struggles to reclaim market share lost to rivals. Reducing worries of a slowing economy, weekly jobless claims were lower than expected, while a separate report showed corporate profits rebounded in the second quarter.
Expectations that the Federal Reserve will soon cut interest rates to shore up economic growth have contributed to Wall Street’s recent gains.
Investors on Friday will focus on Personal Consumption Expenditures data in the U.S. Any signs of inflation increasing could temper broad expectations for easing at the Fed’s policy meeting in September.
Traders are pricing in more than an 80% chance of an interest rate cut next month, according to CME Group’s FedWatch. On Thursday, Fed Governor Lisa Cook filed a lawsuit challenging U.S. President Donald Trump’s attempt to remove her from office earlier this week.
Data analytics company Snowflake surged 20% after raising its forecast for fiscal 2026 product revenue, citing AI demand. HP Inc rose 4.6% after beating quarterly revenue estimates on growing demand for AI-powered personal computers. Packaging food company Hormel Foods tumbled 13% after issuing a downbeat quarterly profit forecast.
Declining stocks outnumbered rising ones within the S&P 500 by a 1.2-to-one ratio. The S&P 500 posted 28 new highs and five new lows; the Nasdaq recorded 117 new highs and 52 new lows. Volume on U.S. exchanges was relatively light, with 13.8 billion shares traded, compared to an average of 16.7 billion shares over the previous 20 sessions.
Reuters, Globe staff