U.S. markets continued their upward march Tuesday, with all three major indexes trading solidly in the green by midday. The Nasdaq was the star performer, tacking on more than 100 points as investors digested fresh economic data showing modest consumer spending growth.
The Dow climbed 1.20% to 47,007.17, while the Nasdaq rose 0.48% to 22,980.75. The S&P 500 gained 0.74% to reach 6,754.86.
Sector Movers
Health care stocks were the clear winners of the session, jumping 2% to lead all sectors higher. On the flip side, energy stocks struggled, falling 0.9% as oil prices retreated.
Retail Sales in Focus
The headline economic release came from retail sales data, which showed U.S. consumer spending rose 0.2% month-over-month in September. That's a noticeable deceleration from August's 0.6% increase, suggesting consumers may be taking a more cautious approach as the year winds down.
Individual Stock Action
While the broader market moved higher in orderly fashion, individual stocks were all over the map. Some companies saw massive gains on positive news, while others got hammered.
The Winners:
Rubico Inc (RUBI) shares rocketed 45% to $0.22 after announcing it had extended its tanker charters, giving investors confidence in the company's near-term revenue visibility.
Clean Energy Technologies Inc (CETY) surged an impressive 67% to $1.79 following news that it secured a $10 million battery energy storage project in New York. That's the kind of contract win that can transform a small-cap company's trajectory.
Barnes & Noble Education Inc (BNED) shares climbed 36% to $9.11 after the company released preliminary full-year fiscal 2025 and year-to-date fiscal 2026 unaudited financial results that apparently impressed investors.
The Losers:
MingZhu Logistics Holdings Ltd (YGMZ) shares crashed 85% to $0.16 after announcing an $8 million registered direct offering. Dilution fears sent shareholders running for the exits.
Zhihu Inc - ADR (ZH) fell 11% to $3.57 after reporting a year-over-year decrease in third-quarter financial results, disappointing investors who had hoped for better performance.
Burlington Stores Inc (BURL) dropped 11% to $254.28 despite reporting mixed third-quarter results. The real concern? The company disclosed that traffic to its stores fell off significantly after the back-to-school period ended, raising questions about consumer demand heading into the holiday season.
Commodities and Global Markets
In commodity markets, oil traded down 1.8% to $57.78, contributing to the weakness in energy stocks. Gold advanced 0.9% to $4,129.50, while silver gained 1% to $50.765. Copper was the standout performer, rising 2.8% to $5.1100.
European markets closed higher across the board. The eurozone's STOXX 600 rose 0.69%, while Spain's IBEX 35 Index climbed 0.93%. London's FTSE 100 gained 0.57%, Germany's DAX 40 advanced 0.68%, and France's CAC 40 rose 0.83%.
Asian markets finished mostly higher, with Japan's Nikkei gaining 0.07%, Hong Kong's Hang Seng up 0.69%, and China's Shanghai Composite climbing 0.87%. India's BSE Sensex bucked the trend, declining 0.37%.
Economic Data Roundup
Beyond the retail sales report, several other economic indicators crossed the tape Tuesday:
- The S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller Home Price Index increased 1.4% year-over-year in September, marking the eighth consecutive month of slowing growth.
- The FHFA house price index came in flat for September.
- U.S. producer prices gained 0.3% month-over-month in September, reversing a 0.1% decline from the previous month.
- U.S. business inventories were unchanged month-over-month in August following a revised 0.1% gain in July.
- U.S. pending home sales gained 1.9% month-over-month in October following a revised 0.1% increase in the previous month.
The data paints a picture of an economy that's growing, but at a measured pace. Consumer spending is positive but slowing, housing markets are cooling gradually, and business activity remains steady. For investors, that's probably the Goldilocks scenario they're hoping for—growth without overheating.