Here's something interesting: the market rallied hard on Tuesday while investors remained absolutely terrified. The CNN Fear & Greed Index ticked up slightly to 14.1 from 13.7, but stayed firmly planted in "Extreme Fear" territory even as stocks posted solid gains across the board.
The Dow Jones surged 664 points to close at 47,112.45, while the S&P 500 climbed 0.91% to 6,765.88 and the Nasdaq Composite added 0.67% to finish at 23,025.59. Not exactly the kind of action you'd expect when fear supposedly dominates market psychology.
The session had its share of drama. Nvidia Corp. (NVDA) sank nearly 2.6% after reports emerged that Meta Platforms Inc. (META) was considering a multibillion-dollar investment in Alphabet Inc.'s (GOOGL) custom AI chips. That's the kind of news that makes investors rethink who wins the AI infrastructure race.
Meanwhile, Apple Inc. (AAPL) touched fresh all-time highs near $280, buoyed by CEO Tim Cook's commitment to ramping up investment in China. The stock couldn't hold those levels though, paring gains to close up just 0.4% for the day.
On the economic front, data came in showing modest momentum. U.S. producer prices increased 0.3% month-over-month in September after falling 0.1% the prior month. Retail sales rose 0.2% in September, a deceleration from August's 0.6% gain. Pending home sales offered a brighter spot, jumping 1.9% in October following a revised 0.1% uptick previously.
Most sectors participated in Tuesday's rally. Communication services, health care, and consumer discretionary stocks led the charge with the biggest gains. Utilities and energy stocks were the notable exceptions, bucking the trend and closing lower.
Looking ahead, investors are waiting on earnings from Deere & Co. (DE) and Li Auto Inc. (LI) today.
Understanding the Fear & Greed Index
So what exactly is this Fear & Greed Index that refuses to budge from extreme fear? It's a measure of current market sentiment based on a simple premise: intense fear pushes stock prices down, while excessive greed drives them up. The index crunches seven equal-weighted indicators into a single reading that ranges from 0 (maximum fear) to 100 (maximum greed).
At 14.1, the current reading suggests investors remain deeply anxious despite Tuesday's broad market strength. That disconnect between sentiment and price action is worth watching—sometimes fear creates opportunities, and sometimes markets eventually catch down to match the mood.