U.S. markets kicked off Monday with no clear direction, as the major indices decided they couldn't quite agree on which way to go. The Dow Jones slipped 0.22% to 47,847.37, losing around 100 points in morning trading. Meanwhile, the NASDAQ had other ideas, rising 0.29% to 23,645.65. The S&P 500 played Switzerland, dropping just 0.01% to 6,869.75.
Sector Scorecard
Information technology stocks were the morning's winners, jumping 0.8% as the sector showed renewed strength. On the flip side, communication services stocks took the biggest hit, falling 1.1% to lead decliners.
IBM Makes Its Move
The headline grabber of the session came from International Business Machines Corporation (IBM), which announced it would acquire Confluent (CFLT) for $31 per share. The deal represents a significant play in the data streaming and enterprise software space.
Big Movers on the Upside
Some stocks absolutely took off Monday morning. Cemtrex, Inc. (CETX) led the charge, rocketing 154% to $7.80 in dramatic fashion.
Wave Life Sciences Ltd. (WVE) wasn't far behind, surging 85% to $13.80. The catalyst? The company released positive interim Phase 1 data showing its obesity drug WVE-007 delivered GLP-1-like fat loss at three months without muscle loss and was generally safe and well tolerated. In the increasingly crowded obesity drug race, that's the kind of news that gets investors' attention.
Treasure Global Inc. (TGL) also caught a significant bid, gaining 63% to $41.39 after announcing it raised its fiscal 2026 revenue target.
The Other Side of the Ledger
Not everyone had a good morning. SMX (Security Matters) Public Limited Company (SMX) dropped 48% to $172.36 after jumping 135% on Friday—a classic case of what goes up fast sometimes comes down faster.
BiomX Inc. (PHGE) fell 37% to $3.2401 after the company discontinued its Phase 2b trial of BX004 in cystic fibrosis patients with chronic Pseudomonas aeruginosa infections. Clinical trial failures tend to have that effect.
Meihua International Medical Technologies Co., Ltd. (MHUA) declined 34% to $9.25 following news that the company will be delisted from the Nasdaq.
Commodities and Global Markets
In commodity markets, oil traded down 1.3% to $59.30 while gold slipped 0.4% to $4,228.20. Silver fell 0.8% to $58.58, and copper declined 0.4% to $5.44.
European markets were mostly subdued, with the eurozone's STOXX 600 down 0.1%. Spain's IBEX 35 managed a 0.1% gain, while London's FTSE 100 fell 0.2%. Germany's DAX 40 rose 0.3%, and France's CAC 40 slipped 0.2%.
Asian markets closed mixed on Monday. Japan's Nikkei rose 0.18%, Hong Kong's Hang Seng dipped 1.23%, China's Shanghai Composite gained 0.54%, and India's BSE Sensex declined 0.71%.
Economic Data Ahead
Investors are keeping an eye on consumer inflation expectations data set for release today.