U.S. Futures Rise On Debt Deal Optimism

U.S. stock futures were trading higher during Monday’s evening deals after major benchmark averages remained closed for a public holiday, with news of a tentative deal between the Joe Biden administration and Republican lawmakers boosting sentiment.

By 6:25pm ET (10:25pm GMT) Dow Jones Futures added 0.3%, S&P 500 Futures were up 0.4% and Nasdaq 100 Futures lifted 0.5%.

Ahead in Tuesday’s trade, market participants will be monitoring fresh housing price index and CB consumer confidence data, as well as earnings results from companies including HP Inc (NYSE:HPQ), Box Inc (NYSE:BOX), and U-Haul Holding Co (NYSE:UHAL).

On the bond markets, United States 10-Year rates were at 3.769%.

U.S. stock futures moved higher in subdued holiday trading on Monday after lawmakers in Washington reached a deal to lift the $31.4 trillion debt limit and avert a possible catastrophic default.

By 07:32 ET (11:32 GMT), the Dow futures contract rose by 60 points or 0.18%, S&P 500 futures added 10 points or 0.23%, and Nasdaq 100 futures jumped by 57 points or 0.39%, Investing.com cited.

Stock markets will be closed on Monday for Memorial Day.

The debt ceiling agreement, forged by President Biden and Republican House Speaker Kevin McCarthy over the weekend after an extended period of political wrangling, will raise the debt ceiling until 2025 and cap non-defense spending for the next two years.

Both Biden and McCarthy said the accord is a product of compromise, although its terms have already received backlash from some members of their respective parties.

The so-called Freedom Caucus – a collection of hard-line conservative Republicans – criticized the deal for not including a number of deep spending cuts. Leftwing Democrats, meanwhile, have chastised Biden for conceding on too many key issues.

The Republican-controlled House of Representatives and the Democratic-controlled Senate are anticipated to vote on the deal later this week. Meanwhile, the clock is still ticking toward June 5, which is when the Treasury Department expects that the federal government will run out of money to pay all its bills.

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