Tuesday brought one of those classic split-personality market sessions where the Dow powers ahead while tech stocks take a breather. The Dow climbed 0.61% to reach 46,729.44, gaining more than 250 points, while the NASDAQ fell 0.28% to 22,808.72. The S&P 500 squeezed out a modest 0.08% gain to close at 6,710.34.
Sector Movements Tell the Story
Communication services stocks led the charge Tuesday, jumping 1.4% as investors rotated into the sector. On the flip side, information technology bore the brunt of selling pressure, declining 1.1% and serving as the session's biggest laggard.
Alibaba Delivers a Beat on Both Lines
Alibaba Group Holding (BABA) gave investors something to cheer about with quarterly results that sailed past Wall Street's expectations. The Chinese e-commerce giant posted revenue of $34.81 billion, representing a 5% year-over-year increase and comfortably topping the analyst consensus of $34.43 billion.
The earnings picture looked even better. Adjusted earnings per American Depositary Share came in at 61 cents, crushing the Street's estimate of 49 cents.
Notable Movers
Several stocks experienced wild swings on Tuesday. Clean Energy Technologies Inc (CETY) skyrocketed 75% to $1.87 after securing a $10 million battery energy storage project in New York. Rubico Inc (RUBI) surged 67% to $0.26 following news that the company extended its tanker charters. Barnes & Noble Education Inc (BNED) climbed 37% to $9.18 on the release of preliminary full-year fiscal 2025 and year-to-date fiscal 2026 unaudited financial results.
The downside saw equally dramatic moves. MingZhu Logistics Holdings Ltd (YGMZ) cratered 84% to $0.17 after announcing an $8 million registered direct offering. GreenPower Motor Company Inc. (GP) dropped 34% to $0.85, while K Wave Media Ltd. (KWM) fell 24% to $0.68.
Commodities and Global Markets
Commodity markets showed interesting divergence. Oil slipped 2.1% to $57.59, while precious metals rallied with gold advancing 1.1% to $4,140.50 and silver jumping 1.7% to $51.185. Copper showed particular strength, rising 3.8% to $5.1545.
European markets closed higher across the board. The eurozone's STOXX 600 gained 0.6%, Spain's IBEX 35 rose 0.8%, London's FTSE 100 advanced 0.5%, Germany's DAX 40 climbed 0.7%, and France's CAC 40 added 0.6%.
Asian markets finished mostly in positive territory. Japan's Nikkei edged up 0.07%, Hong Kong's Hang Seng gained 0.69%, and China's Shanghai Composite rose 0.87%. India's BSE Sensex bucked the trend, declining 0.37%.
Economic Data Releases
The economic calendar delivered several notable data points. The S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller Home Price Index increased 1.4% year-over-year in September, marking the eighth consecutive month of deceleration. The FHFA house price index came in flat for September.
U.S. producer prices gained 0.3% month-over-month in September after declining 0.1% in the previous month. Retail sales rose 0.2% month-over-month in September, a significant slowdown from August's 0.6% gain.