Why Is The Us Stock Market Up Today?
- The US stock market edged higher on Tuesday and held near record highs as strong AI earnings and resilient labor data outweighed fresh geopolitical risk.
- The S&P 500 rose 0.14% at press time on a chip rally, though Iran’s ending of US talks and heavy software selling kept the gains modest.
- Artificial intelligence was the day’s strongest engine.
- Broadcom (AVGO) climbed about 5%, and Qualcomm (QCOM) rose 5.6% as that confidence spread.
What Happened
This pushed investors back into semiconductors.
That threat revived the crude supply premium, lifting energy shares. It also pushed investors toward caution, the main reason the broad market rose only marginally despite the strength of AI.
Utilities led at 1.58%. The sector caught a defensive bid as investors sought safety during the Iran escalation. Rising power demand from AI data centers added a longer-term reason to buy.
Market Context
The US stock market edged higher on Tuesday and held near record highs as strong AI earnings and resilient labor data outweighed fresh geopolitical risk.
The surge signaled a resilient labor market, easing slowdown fears and supporting stocks.
However, it also cut bets on near-term rate cuts. A firm jobs market gives the Federal Reserve less reason to ease, so the gain in stocks stayed capped.
The advance was narrow. Advancers and decliners finished nearly even. Gains in chips and cyclicals offset heavy selling in mega-cap software such as Microsoft (MSFT). New highs still outnumbered new lows by about two to one, a sign of steady underlying strength.
Energy rose 1.38% because Iran’s Hormuz threat pushed oil higher. Higher crude prices lift revenue for producers like ExxonMobil (XOM) and Chevron (CVX).
Basic Materials gained 1.33% as firmer commodity prices and inflation-hedge demand followed the move in oil. Technology added 0.96% on the chip rally.
Why It Matters
Fresh labor data reinforced the risk-on mood. April job openings, tracked by the Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey (JOLTS), jumped to 7.62 million. That topped the 6.9 million economists expected and marked the highest level since May 2024.
3. The US-Iran Deal Collapsed and Lifted Oil Risk
The S&P 500 trades near record territory after a bull-flag breakout in late May. A bull flag forms when a sharp rally pauses in a tight channel before pushing higher.
Details
The S&P 500 rose 0.14% at press time on a chip rally, though Iran’s ending of US talks and heavy software selling kept the gains modest.
1. AI Earnings Strength Lifted Chipmakers
Artificial intelligence was the day’s strongest engine. A record earnings beat from Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) and a high-profile chip endorsement for Marvell Technology (MRVL) showed AI demand is still turning into real revenue.
Broadcom (AVGO) climbed about 5%, and Qualcomm (QCOM) rose 5.6% as that confidence spread. The chip rally did most of the work, lifting the indexes toward record highs.
2. Resilient Job Openings Backed the Economy
Geopolitics pulled the other way. Iran said it was ending all negotiations with the United States, citing repeated ceasefire violations, per CNBC. It also threatened to block the Strait of Hormuz, a route that carries a large share of global oil.
What Happened to Major US Indexes?
S&P 500: +0.14% to about 7,610, near record highs
Dow Jones Industrial Average: +0.21% to roughly 51,187
Nasdaq Composite: +0.10% to about 27,113
The index just cleared resistance at 7,604. If it holds that level, 7,677 and 7,890 are the next targets, the latter about 3.7% higher. Support sits at 7,546 and 7,505.
Which Sectors Are Holding Up?