Morning Bid:'Magnificent 7' ride back into town

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By Amanda Cooper

LONDON (Reuters) - What matters in U.S. and global markets today by Amanda Cooper.

The stock market is a little on the weaker side today, with U.S. futures mostly steady, as investors take a breather from this week's blistering rally. Global trade tensions might finally be easing, money is flowing back into the glittering AI sector and the prospect of potentially bullish Federal Reserve rate cuts is back on the table.

Mike is out today, but check out his latest column to find out why U.S. budget anxiety could quickly replace the trade war tensions.

Today's Market Minute

* President Donald Trump kicked off his trip to the Gulf on Tuesday with a surprise announcement that the United States will lift long-standing sanctions on Syria, and a $600 billion commitment from Saudi Arabia to invest in the U.S.

* Tesla plans to start shipping components from China to the U.S. for the production of Cybercab and Semi trucks from the end of this month, after the U.S. and China reached a truce over tariffs.

* How will the trade war de-escalation impact China's mammoth manufacturing sector and the country's energy needs? Read Reuters’ columnist Gavin Maguire’s latest piece to learn which key metrics you should be tracking.

* The fog of uncertainty created by Trump's trade war may be lifting, but it’s leaving investors with a lingering question: what was the point of all that chaos around what the president termed "Liberation Day"? Check out Jamie McGeever’s analysis in his latest column.

* The comprehensive trade deal announced by the U.S. and UK governments last week was a damp squib, but that shouldn’t worry Downing Street. The bigger prize is closer collaboration with the European Union, and that could accelerate after the UK-EU summit next week. Find out more in the column from Panmure Capital’s Joachim Klement.

The Magnificent 7 Ride Back into Town

This week's stock market rally could well go down in Wall Street history as one of the most epic on record. The S&P 500 is up by more than 20% in the 36 days since it hit a 15-month low on April 7. The index took just 16 days to hit the 20%-recovery-from-the-lows mark in 2020 and 18 days in 2009. The difference this time around is there is no tidal wave of monetary or fiscal stimulus helping to grease the wheels of the rally. The bulls aren't just back, they're in the driving seat and the Magnificent 7 - Apple, Amazon, Microsoft, Nvidia, Meta and Tesla - are the engine.

Investors have an affinity for shiny things. This week's cocktail of market-friendly catalysts, including the 90-day halt to the U.S./China trade war, a benign reading of inflation and a raft of headline-grabbing investment deals from the Middle East, where Trump happens to be visiting, have set the stage for Mag 7 mania once again.