Microsoft hires Sam Altman, Cruise CEO resigns - what's moving markets

Investing.com -- U.S. stock futures edged higher ahead of the first day of a Thanksgiving-shortened trading week, as investors geared up for minutes from the Federal Reserve's latest meeting and earnings from AI-darling Nvidia (NASDAQ:NVDA) on Tuesday. Sam Altman is set to join Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) after a dramatic weekend saw his ouster from the helm of ChatGPT-maker OpenAI. Elsewhere, Cruise boss Kyle Vogt resigns following a series of recent missteps at the robotaxi group.

1. Futures inch up

U.S. stock futures hovered just above the flatline to begin a holiday-shortened trading week, with investors looking ahead to upcoming minutes from the Federal Reserve's latest meeting as they attempt to gauge the central bank's future policy path.

By 05:09 ET (10:09 GMT), the Dow futures contract had added 26 points or 0.1%, S&P 500 futures had gained 6 points or 0.1%, and Nasdaq 100 futures had risen by 32 points or 0.2%.

The main indices on Wall Street ended the prior session marginally in the green, helping the benchmark S&P 500 and 30-stock Dow Jones Industrial Average post their first three-week winning streaks since the summer. Meanwhile, the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite surged to its best week since June.

On Tuesday, traders will have the opportunity to parse through minutes from the Fed's November meeting, where officials chose to keep interest rates steady at a target range of 5.25% to 5.50%. The release will likely be one of the highlights of the economic calendar in a week truncated by Thanksgiving festivities.

Corporate earnings this week will also feature quarterly figures from Nvidia, the California chipmaker that has become a focal point of this year's surge in enthusiasm over generative artificial intelligence. Lowe's (NYSE:LOW) will report as well, becoming the latest big-box retailer to provide an update on the state of the U.S. consumer heading into the crucial holiday shopping season.

2. Altman to run Microsoft's new AI team - Nadella

Microsoft is set to hire Sam Altman to lead a new advanced artificial intelligence research team, in a move that comes just days after the prominent AI-industry figure was ousted as CEO of OpenAI.

In a post on social media platform X announcing the appointment, Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella wrote that he is "look[ing] forward to moving quickly" to provide Altman and Greg Brockman -- who was also removed from his role as OpenAI president -- "with the resources needed for their success."

Earlier on Monday, The Information reported that Altman, one of the leading voices in a global debate over the rapid expansion of nascent AI technology, will no longer return as OpenAI's CEO despite executive efforts to rehire him. The report cited an internal address by co-founder and board director Ilya Sutskever.