On September 2nd, the three major US stock indices closed lower collectively. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 0.55%, the S&P 500 index fell 0.69%, and the Nasdaq Composite index fell 0.82%.
Most large-cap tech stocks declined. Nvidia fell nearly 2%, while Amazon and Apple fell more than 1%.
According to a Wall Street News report, Nvidia stated that recent rumors regarding Nvidia's H100/H200 chips being "supply constrained" and "sold out" are false information, and that there are sufficient H100/H200 chips to meet all orders.
Popular China-concept stocks showed mixed performance. The Nasdaq Golden Dragon China Index closed up 0.52%. Li Auto rose over 4%, NIO rose over 3%, Alibaba rose over 2%, while Youdao fell over 5%, and Bilibili fell over 3%.
Google's after-hours stock price gain once expanded to 7%, and Apple's after-hours gain once expanded to 4%. On the news front, a US judge announced the ruling in the antitrust case against Google in the web search domain. The US judge ruled that Google does not need to sell Chrome or divest the Android operating system; Google does not need to stop paying Apple and other companies for pre-installing Google products; the judge prohibited Google from signing exclusive contracts for internet search; Google must share information with competitors to address the online search monopoly issue.
European stocks closed collectively lower overnight. The Euro Stoxx 50 index fell over 1.4%, the UK's FTSE 100 index fell nearly 0.9%, France's CAC 40 index fell 0.70%, Germany's DAX 30 index fell over 2%, and Italy's FTSE MIB index fell 1.61%.