Marketdash

Dow Climbs 200 Points While Oracle Tumbles on Mixed Quarterly Results

MarketDash Editorial Team
16 hours ago
U.S. markets opened with mixed signals Thursday as the Dow Jones gained over 200 points while tech stocks stumbled. Oracle's shares plunged 15% despite beating earnings expectations, dragged down by disappointing revenue. Materials led gains while information technology lagged, and jobless claims surprised to the upside.

U.S. stocks opened Thursday morning in a decidedly mixed mood, with the Dow Jones powering higher while its tech-heavy counterparts took a breather. The Dow climbed 0.45% to 48,273.18, but the NASDAQ fell 0.70% to 23,488.33 and the S&P 500 slipped 0.35% to 6,862.54.

Sector Action: Materials Shine, Tech Stumbles

Materials shares jumped 1.2% on Thursday, leading the market higher. On the flip side, information technology stocks fell 1.4%, weighing on the broader indices.

Oracle's Disappointing Morning

Oracle Corp. (ORCL) shares tumbled around 15% after the software giant delivered mixed second-quarter results for fiscal 2026. The company reported revenue of $16.06 billion, falling short of analyst estimates of $16.21 billion. But here's the twist: Oracle's adjusted earnings actually beat expectations handily, growing 54% year-over-year to $2.26 per share versus estimates of $1.64 per share. Sometimes even beating on the bottom line isn't enough when the top line disappoints.

Big Movers on the Upside

Black Titan Corp (BTTC) shares rocketed 143% to $8.07 after unveiling its Digital Asset Treasury Plus framework and launching Pillar 1, focused on utility-driven digital asset deployment and cash-flow potential.

AXIL Brands Inc (AXIL) surged 72% to $8.65 following news of a national retail distribution agreement with Walmart.

Agape ATP Corp (ATPC) shares climbed 61% to $0.11 in Thursday trading.

Notable Decliners

Rezolute Inc (RZLT) shares crashed 87% to $1.38 after announcing its Phase 3 sunRIZE study of Ersodetug in congenital hyperinsulinism failed to meet the primary or key secondary endpoint.

C3is Inc (CISS) fell 80% to $0.34 after pricing a $9 million offering of 7.5 million units at $1.20 per unit.

ChowChow Cloud International HLDG Ltd (CHOW) declined 54% to $0.84.

Commodities and Global Markets

Oil traded down 2% to $57.28 while gold gained 0.7% to $4,254.90. Silver surged 3.3% to $63.010, and copper rose 1.9% to $5.4535.

European markets showed strength across the board. The eurozone's STOXX 600 rose 0.4%, Spain's IBEX 35 climbed 0.9%, London's FTSE 100 gained 0.1%, Germany's DAX 40 added 0.5%, and France's CAC 40 surged 0.8%.

Asian markets closed mostly lower Thursday. Japan's Nikkei fell 0.90%, Hong Kong's Hang Seng dipped 0.04%, China's Shanghai Composite declined 0.70%, while India's BSE Sensex bucked the trend with a 0.51% gain.

Economic Data

U.S. initial jobless claims rose by 44,000 from the previous week to 236,000 in the week ending December 6, coming in above market expectations of 220,000.

The U.S. trade deficit narrowed to $52.8 billion in September from $59.3 billion in the previous month, better than market estimates of a $63.3 billion gap.

Dow Climbs 200 Points While Oracle Tumbles on Mixed Quarterly Results

MarketDash Editorial Team
16 hours ago
U.S. markets opened with mixed signals Thursday as the Dow Jones gained over 200 points while tech stocks stumbled. Oracle's shares plunged 15% despite beating earnings expectations, dragged down by disappointing revenue. Materials led gains while information technology lagged, and jobless claims surprised to the upside.

U.S. stocks opened Thursday morning in a decidedly mixed mood, with the Dow Jones powering higher while its tech-heavy counterparts took a breather. The Dow climbed 0.45% to 48,273.18, but the NASDAQ fell 0.70% to 23,488.33 and the S&P 500 slipped 0.35% to 6,862.54.

Sector Action: Materials Shine, Tech Stumbles

Materials shares jumped 1.2% on Thursday, leading the market higher. On the flip side, information technology stocks fell 1.4%, weighing on the broader indices.

Oracle's Disappointing Morning

Oracle Corp. (ORCL) shares tumbled around 15% after the software giant delivered mixed second-quarter results for fiscal 2026. The company reported revenue of $16.06 billion, falling short of analyst estimates of $16.21 billion. But here's the twist: Oracle's adjusted earnings actually beat expectations handily, growing 54% year-over-year to $2.26 per share versus estimates of $1.64 per share. Sometimes even beating on the bottom line isn't enough when the top line disappoints.

Big Movers on the Upside

Black Titan Corp (BTTC) shares rocketed 143% to $8.07 after unveiling its Digital Asset Treasury Plus framework and launching Pillar 1, focused on utility-driven digital asset deployment and cash-flow potential.

AXIL Brands Inc (AXIL) surged 72% to $8.65 following news of a national retail distribution agreement with Walmart.

Agape ATP Corp (ATPC) shares climbed 61% to $0.11 in Thursday trading.

Notable Decliners

Rezolute Inc (RZLT) shares crashed 87% to $1.38 after announcing its Phase 3 sunRIZE study of Ersodetug in congenital hyperinsulinism failed to meet the primary or key secondary endpoint.

C3is Inc (CISS) fell 80% to $0.34 after pricing a $9 million offering of 7.5 million units at $1.20 per unit.

ChowChow Cloud International HLDG Ltd (CHOW) declined 54% to $0.84.

Commodities and Global Markets

Oil traded down 2% to $57.28 while gold gained 0.7% to $4,254.90. Silver surged 3.3% to $63.010, and copper rose 1.9% to $5.4535.

European markets showed strength across the board. The eurozone's STOXX 600 rose 0.4%, Spain's IBEX 35 climbed 0.9%, London's FTSE 100 gained 0.1%, Germany's DAX 40 added 0.5%, and France's CAC 40 surged 0.8%.

Asian markets closed mostly lower Thursday. Japan's Nikkei fell 0.90%, Hong Kong's Hang Seng dipped 0.04%, China's Shanghai Composite declined 0.70%, while India's BSE Sensex bucked the trend with a 0.51% gain.

Economic Data

U.S. initial jobless claims rose by 44,000 from the previous week to 236,000 in the week ending December 6, coming in above market expectations of 220,000.

The U.S. trade deficit narrowed to $52.8 billion in September from $59.3 billion in the previous month, better than market estimates of a $63.3 billion gap.