US stocks notched fresh highs on Friday amid a record-setting rally as the US and China advanced trade talks and the “Magnificent Seven” tech stocks continued to climb.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) rose 0.4% and the S&P 500 (^GSPC) jumped nearly 0.5%. The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) led gains, adding about 0.7%, as Apple (AAPL) stock rallied on optimism over its new iPhones hitting store shelves.
All three major indexes hit all-time highs for a second session in a row, ending the week on an upbeat note as the dust settled on the Federal Reserve’s return to interest rate cuts. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq cinched their third straight weekly gains, adding 1.2% and 2.2%, respectively. The Dow climbed 1%, marking its second consecutive weekly gain.
Save for Nvidia (NVDA), the Mag 7 tech stocks all posted gains for the five trading sessions through Friday, led by Tesla (TSLA). Tesla ended the week up nearly 8%, while Alphabet (GOOG, GOOGL) added around 6% and Apple jumped almost 5%.
Investors on Friday were focused on details from Trump’s conversation with Chinese President Xi Jinping. The US president said in a post on Truth Social following the talks, “We made progress on many very important issues including Trade, Fentanyl, the need to bring the War between Russia and Ukraine to an end, and the approval of the TikTok Deal.”
The details of the TikTok deal — which would allow the social media app owned by Chinese tech giant ByteDance to continue US operations amid an impending ban — are not yet clear. The Wall Street Journal reported Tuesday that the agreement would involve a consortium of investors including Oracle (ORCL), Silver Lake, and Andreessen Horowitz taking an 80% stake in the company.
Notably, a summary of Trump and Xi’s talk in Chinese state media did not provide a detailed update on a TikTok deal beyond saying that Xi supported a commercial solution to the problem and that he wanted a set of rules that would allow Chinese companies to invest in the US.
The writeup from China also said that the US should avoid new restrictive trade measures to avoid “undermining” recent trade talks.
Read more: The latest on Trump’s tariffs.
Elsewhere in markets, nuclear stocks including Oklo (OKLO) and NANO Nuclear (NNE) rallied amid optimism in the sector. Meanwhile, chipmaker Micron (MU) pulled back from a record high ahead of its quarterly report which lands Sept. 23. AI chipmaker Broadcom (AVGO) ended the week down 4% after a big upswing last week.
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Micron falls from record ahead of earnings
Memory chipmaker Micron (MU) saw its shares fall more than 3% Friday, sinking from a record close of $168.89 in the previous trading session as investors await the company’s quarterly earnings report Sept. 23.
Despite the pullback Friday, Wall Street analysts are bullish on the stock.
JPMorgan analyst Harlan Sur reiterated his Overweight rating on Micron shares Friday, noting “AI demand growth” and “rising hyperscaler capex budgets.”
Micron’s memory chips are used in Nvidia’s (NVDA) GPUs (graphics processing units) for AI, and “hyperscale” AI data center operators such as Meta (META), Oracle (ORCL) and Alphabet (GOOGL, GOOG) have been continuously upping their capital expenditures to increase their computing capacity as they rush to meet AI demand.
TD Cowen analyst Krish Sankar said his own note, “We think MU stock will continue its outperformance in the short term as checks continue to support that momentum.”
Overall, analysts tracked by Bloomberg expect the chipmaker to report earnings per share of $2.83 and revenue of $11.1 billion for the fourth quarter of its 2025 fiscal year.
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Stocks open higher with Trump-Xi call underway
US stocks edged higher on Friday at the open, eyeing fresh records.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) and the S&P 500 (^GSPC) rose more than 0.2%, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) climbed 0.3%. The gains kept an advance on Thursday’s all-time highs in play.
The moves come as a highly anticipated call between President Trump and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping is underway, with the fate of TikTok and potentially the trade relationship between the world’s two largest economies in the balance, Yahoo Finance’s Ben Werschkul reports. The call began at 8 am E.T. on Friday.
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