Markets Push Higher as Gold Surges and Tech Stocks Diverge on Earnings

MarketDash Editorial Team
11 days ago
U.S. stocks climbed midweek with the Dow up over 350 points, while gold jumped 1.4% and silver surged more than 4%. Tech earnings created winners and losers, with Nutanix tumbling 18% on weak guidance while Arrowhead Pharmaceuticals soared 19% on strong results.

Wednesday brought some welcome optimism to Wall Street, with U.S. stocks pushing higher across the board. The Dow Jones climbed 0.75% to 47,466.81, adding more than 350 points, while the NASDAQ rose 0.93% to 23,240.04. The S&P 500 joined the party with a 0.82% gain to 6,821.37.

Sector Performance Shows Clear Winners and Losers

Information technology shares led the charge, jumping 1.5% as investors digested a mixed bag of earnings reports from tech companies. On the flip side, communication services stocks were the session's laggards, slipping 0.4%.

Earnings Season Creates Sharp Divides

The day's biggest movers were driven almost entirely by quarterly results, and the divergence was striking.

On the winning side, Arrowhead Pharmaceuticals Inc (ARWR) shares rocketed 19% to $55.90 after delivering better-than-expected quarterly financial results. Amber International Holding Limited (AMBR) had an even more dramatic day, surging 58% to $2.4901 after reporting third-quarter sales that beat expectations and announcing a $50 million buyback program. Petco Health and Wellness Company Inc (WOOF) also impressed investors, gaining 16% to $3.44 on stronger-than-anticipated third-quarter earnings per share.

The losses were equally dramatic. Nutanix Inc (NTNX) took the biggest hit, dropping 18% to $48.41 after the company reported disappointing first-quarter results and, more importantly, cut its fiscal 2026 sales guidance below analyst estimates on Tuesday. That kind of forward guidance miss tends to spook investors more than a bad quarter in the rearview mirror.

Ambarella Inc (AMBA) fell 15% to $77.13 following its third-quarter results, while Zscaler Inc (ZS) declined 10% to $261.36 after releasing first-quarter financial results that apparently didn't meet investor expectations.

Commodities Rally Across the Board

Commodities had a particularly strong showing. Oil edged up 0.1% to $58.01, but the real action was in precious metals. Gold traded up 1.4% to $4,196.60, while silver had an especially impressive run, surging 4.3% to $53.135. Copper also joined the party, rising 2.1% to $5.1955.

Global Markets Join the Rally

European markets closed higher across the continent. The eurozone's STOXX 600 rose 1.12%, while Spain's IBEX 35 Index climbed 1.35%. London's FTSE 100 gained 0.94%, Germany's DAX 40 advanced 1.03%, and France's CAC 40 rose 0.90%.

Asian markets wrapped up their Wednesday session mostly in positive territory. Japan's Nikkei posted a solid 1.85% gain, while Hong Kong's Hang Seng edged up 0.13% and India's BSE Sensex climbed 1.21%. China's Shanghai Composite was the regional outlier, slipping 0.15%.

Economic Data Offers Mixed Signals

The economic calendar delivered several notable data points. U.S. durable goods orders increased 0.5% month-over-month in September, a significant slowdown from the revised 3.0% gain in August.

On the employment front, U.S. initial jobless claims declined by 6,000 from the previous week to 216,000 in the week ending November 22, suggesting continued labor market stability.

The Chicago PMI, however, painted a more concerning picture, declining to 36.3 in November from 43.8 in October. That result came in well below market expectations of 44.3, indicating contraction in Midwest manufacturing activity.

In energy markets, U.S. crude oil inventories jumped by 2.77 million barrels in the week ending November 21. That was a significant surprise, following a 3.426 million-barrel decline the previous week and contradicting market estimates that called for a 0.5-million decrease. The inventory build suggests either weakening demand or improving supply conditions.

Markets Push Higher as Gold Surges and Tech Stocks Diverge on Earnings

MarketDash Editorial Team
11 days ago
U.S. stocks climbed midweek with the Dow up over 350 points, while gold jumped 1.4% and silver surged more than 4%. Tech earnings created winners and losers, with Nutanix tumbling 18% on weak guidance while Arrowhead Pharmaceuticals soared 19% on strong results.

Wednesday brought some welcome optimism to Wall Street, with U.S. stocks pushing higher across the board. The Dow Jones climbed 0.75% to 47,466.81, adding more than 350 points, while the NASDAQ rose 0.93% to 23,240.04. The S&P 500 joined the party with a 0.82% gain to 6,821.37.

Sector Performance Shows Clear Winners and Losers

Information technology shares led the charge, jumping 1.5% as investors digested a mixed bag of earnings reports from tech companies. On the flip side, communication services stocks were the session's laggards, slipping 0.4%.

Earnings Season Creates Sharp Divides

The day's biggest movers were driven almost entirely by quarterly results, and the divergence was striking.

On the winning side, Arrowhead Pharmaceuticals Inc (ARWR) shares rocketed 19% to $55.90 after delivering better-than-expected quarterly financial results. Amber International Holding Limited (AMBR) had an even more dramatic day, surging 58% to $2.4901 after reporting third-quarter sales that beat expectations and announcing a $50 million buyback program. Petco Health and Wellness Company Inc (WOOF) also impressed investors, gaining 16% to $3.44 on stronger-than-anticipated third-quarter earnings per share.

The losses were equally dramatic. Nutanix Inc (NTNX) took the biggest hit, dropping 18% to $48.41 after the company reported disappointing first-quarter results and, more importantly, cut its fiscal 2026 sales guidance below analyst estimates on Tuesday. That kind of forward guidance miss tends to spook investors more than a bad quarter in the rearview mirror.

Ambarella Inc (AMBA) fell 15% to $77.13 following its third-quarter results, while Zscaler Inc (ZS) declined 10% to $261.36 after releasing first-quarter financial results that apparently didn't meet investor expectations.

Commodities Rally Across the Board

Commodities had a particularly strong showing. Oil edged up 0.1% to $58.01, but the real action was in precious metals. Gold traded up 1.4% to $4,196.60, while silver had an especially impressive run, surging 4.3% to $53.135. Copper also joined the party, rising 2.1% to $5.1955.

Global Markets Join the Rally

European markets closed higher across the continent. The eurozone's STOXX 600 rose 1.12%, while Spain's IBEX 35 Index climbed 1.35%. London's FTSE 100 gained 0.94%, Germany's DAX 40 advanced 1.03%, and France's CAC 40 rose 0.90%.

Asian markets wrapped up their Wednesday session mostly in positive territory. Japan's Nikkei posted a solid 1.85% gain, while Hong Kong's Hang Seng edged up 0.13% and India's BSE Sensex climbed 1.21%. China's Shanghai Composite was the regional outlier, slipping 0.15%.

Economic Data Offers Mixed Signals

The economic calendar delivered several notable data points. U.S. durable goods orders increased 0.5% month-over-month in September, a significant slowdown from the revised 3.0% gain in August.

On the employment front, U.S. initial jobless claims declined by 6,000 from the previous week to 216,000 in the week ending November 22, suggesting continued labor market stability.

The Chicago PMI, however, painted a more concerning picture, declining to 36.3 in November from 43.8 in October. That result came in well below market expectations of 44.3, indicating contraction in Midwest manufacturing activity.

In energy markets, U.S. crude oil inventories jumped by 2.77 million barrels in the week ending November 21. That was a significant surprise, following a 3.426 million-barrel decline the previous week and contradicting market estimates that called for a 0.5-million decrease. The inventory build suggests either weakening demand or improving supply conditions.