Marketdash

Dow Surges to Record as Oracle's AI Spending Spooks Tech Investors

MarketDash Editorial Team
13 hours ago
The Dow Jones Industrial Average hit fresh records Thursday as money rotated from pricey tech names into industrials and financials, while Oracle's massive AI spending forecast sparked concerns across the chip sector.

Thursday's market told two very different stories. The Dow Jones Industrial Average powered to fresh record highs, gaining 1.2% to reach 48,653 by 1:00 p.m. ET. Combined with Wednesday's 1.1% rally, it marked the blue-chip index's best two-day run since May. Meanwhile, the tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 dropped 0.7% as concerns about AI spending timelines rattled chipmakers and cloud infrastructure plays.

The catalyst for tech's stumble? Oracle Corp. (ORCL) posted earnings that looked fine on the surface but came with a nasty surprise. Revenue growth was solid, just slightly below Wall Street's expectations. But then Oracle dramatically raised its fiscal 2026 capital expenditure forecast to build out AI data centers, and investors did the math they didn't like. Shares sank 13.3% as the market grappled with a familiar question: how long will it take for these massive AI infrastructure investments to actually pay off?

The Oracle selloff rippled across the semiconductor space. Nvidia Corp. (NVDA) fell 2.5%, Broadcom Inc. (AVGO) dropped 2.3%, and Intel Corp. (INTC) lost 3%. Technology ended up as the only S&P 500 sector trading in negative territory. The S&P 500 itself held the flat line, caught between surging value stocks and dragging tech names.

But step outside of tech and Thursday's market looked downright cheerful. Small caps continued their breakout run, with the Russell 2000 climbing 1% to 2,585. Investors are clearly rotating out of expensive technology stocks and into industrials, financials, and healthcare. This shift intensified after the Federal Reserve delivered its third consecutive interest-rate cut Wednesday, keeping the broader risk appetite intact even as rate-cut expectations for early 2025 cool off.

Labor Data Shows Early Signs of Cooling

On the economic data front, initial jobless claims jumped to 236,000 for the week ending December 6. That's up notably from the three-year low of 192,000 and above the consensus forecast of 220,000. It's an early signal that labor market conditions might be softening, though one week doesn't make a trend.

Despite the uptick in claims, traders aren't expecting the Fed to make any moves at its late-January meeting. Fed Chair Jerome Powell signaled a wait-and-see approach Wednesday, and markets heard him loud and clear. Polymarket pricing showed an 82% probability of no rate change in January. The dollar slipped to a two-month low, falling for a second straight session as rate-cut fever cooled.

Commodities on Fire, Crypto Under Pressure

While tech struggled, commodities had a spectacular day. Gold rose 1.1% to $4,280 an ounce. Copper climbed nearly 2%. But the real star was silver, which surged 3.7% to a record $64 per ounce, marking its third consecutive all-time high. Silver is now up 121% year to date, outpacing essentially every other major asset class. Materials stocks reflected the commodity strength, with the sector up 2.0% and leading all S&P 500 sectors.

Crypto markets, however, stayed under pressure. Bitcoin (BTC) dropped 2.5% below $90,000. The pain was even worse for altcoins: Ethereum (ETH) fell 4.2%, Solana (SOL) lost 3.9%, and Cardano (ADA) plunged 9.2%. The crypto proxy Strategy Inc. (MSTR) dropped 5.4%, extending its recent slide.

Market Performance Snapshot

Major IndicesPrice% Change
Nasdaq 10025,595.45-0.7%
S&P 5006,884.860.0%
Dow Jones48,653.82+1.2%
Russell 20002,585.75+1.0%
Updated by 1:00 p.m. ET

Looking at major ETFs, the divergence between value and growth was stark. The SPDR Dow Jones Industrial Average ETF moved 1.22% higher to $487.21. The Vanguard S&P 500 ETF flattened at $632.09. But the tech-heavy Invesco QQQ Trust Series eased 0.72% to $623.09. The iShares Russell 2000 ETF traded at $257.31, up 1.0%.

Sector performance told the rotation story clearly. The Technology Select Sector SPDR Fund lagged, down 1.1%. Meanwhile, the Materials Select Sector SPDR Fund outperformed dramatically, up 2.0%.

Russell 1000's Biggest Movers

The day's biggest winners in the Russell 1000 reflected the value stock rally. Vail Resorts jumped 8.60%, while The Mosaic Company surged 8.13%. Rocket Lab USA climbed 7.73%, Wayfair gained 7.62%, and Royal Caribbean Cruises advanced 6.82%.

Stock Name% Change
Vail Resorts, Inc.+8.60%
The Mosaic Company+8.13%
Rocket Lab USA, Inc.+7.73%
Wayfair Inc.+7.62%
Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd.+6.82%

On the losing side, Oracle led the decliners at -13.28%. Robinhood Markets dropped 7.87%, Medical Properties Trust fell 6.62%, Vertiv Holdings declined 5.82%, and The Trade Desk lost 5.57%.

Stock Name% Change
Oracle Corporation-13.28%
Robinhood Markets, Inc.-7.87%
Medical Properties Trust Inc.-6.62%
Vertiv Holdings Co-5.82%
The Trade Desk, Inc.-5.57%

The market's message Thursday was clear: investors are taking profits in expensive tech names and putting that money to work in areas that have lagged. Whether this rotation has legs or is just a brief pause in tech's dominance remains to be seen, but for now, the old economy is having its moment.

Dow Surges to Record as Oracle's AI Spending Spooks Tech Investors

MarketDash Editorial Team
13 hours ago
The Dow Jones Industrial Average hit fresh records Thursday as money rotated from pricey tech names into industrials and financials, while Oracle's massive AI spending forecast sparked concerns across the chip sector.

Thursday's market told two very different stories. The Dow Jones Industrial Average powered to fresh record highs, gaining 1.2% to reach 48,653 by 1:00 p.m. ET. Combined with Wednesday's 1.1% rally, it marked the blue-chip index's best two-day run since May. Meanwhile, the tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 dropped 0.7% as concerns about AI spending timelines rattled chipmakers and cloud infrastructure plays.

The catalyst for tech's stumble? Oracle Corp. (ORCL) posted earnings that looked fine on the surface but came with a nasty surprise. Revenue growth was solid, just slightly below Wall Street's expectations. But then Oracle dramatically raised its fiscal 2026 capital expenditure forecast to build out AI data centers, and investors did the math they didn't like. Shares sank 13.3% as the market grappled with a familiar question: how long will it take for these massive AI infrastructure investments to actually pay off?

The Oracle selloff rippled across the semiconductor space. Nvidia Corp. (NVDA) fell 2.5%, Broadcom Inc. (AVGO) dropped 2.3%, and Intel Corp. (INTC) lost 3%. Technology ended up as the only S&P 500 sector trading in negative territory. The S&P 500 itself held the flat line, caught between surging value stocks and dragging tech names.

But step outside of tech and Thursday's market looked downright cheerful. Small caps continued their breakout run, with the Russell 2000 climbing 1% to 2,585. Investors are clearly rotating out of expensive technology stocks and into industrials, financials, and healthcare. This shift intensified after the Federal Reserve delivered its third consecutive interest-rate cut Wednesday, keeping the broader risk appetite intact even as rate-cut expectations for early 2025 cool off.

Labor Data Shows Early Signs of Cooling

On the economic data front, initial jobless claims jumped to 236,000 for the week ending December 6. That's up notably from the three-year low of 192,000 and above the consensus forecast of 220,000. It's an early signal that labor market conditions might be softening, though one week doesn't make a trend.

Despite the uptick in claims, traders aren't expecting the Fed to make any moves at its late-January meeting. Fed Chair Jerome Powell signaled a wait-and-see approach Wednesday, and markets heard him loud and clear. Polymarket pricing showed an 82% probability of no rate change in January. The dollar slipped to a two-month low, falling for a second straight session as rate-cut fever cooled.

Commodities on Fire, Crypto Under Pressure

While tech struggled, commodities had a spectacular day. Gold rose 1.1% to $4,280 an ounce. Copper climbed nearly 2%. But the real star was silver, which surged 3.7% to a record $64 per ounce, marking its third consecutive all-time high. Silver is now up 121% year to date, outpacing essentially every other major asset class. Materials stocks reflected the commodity strength, with the sector up 2.0% and leading all S&P 500 sectors.

Crypto markets, however, stayed under pressure. Bitcoin (BTC) dropped 2.5% below $90,000. The pain was even worse for altcoins: Ethereum (ETH) fell 4.2%, Solana (SOL) lost 3.9%, and Cardano (ADA) plunged 9.2%. The crypto proxy Strategy Inc. (MSTR) dropped 5.4%, extending its recent slide.

Market Performance Snapshot

Major IndicesPrice% Change
Nasdaq 10025,595.45-0.7%
S&P 5006,884.860.0%
Dow Jones48,653.82+1.2%
Russell 20002,585.75+1.0%
Updated by 1:00 p.m. ET

Looking at major ETFs, the divergence between value and growth was stark. The SPDR Dow Jones Industrial Average ETF moved 1.22% higher to $487.21. The Vanguard S&P 500 ETF flattened at $632.09. But the tech-heavy Invesco QQQ Trust Series eased 0.72% to $623.09. The iShares Russell 2000 ETF traded at $257.31, up 1.0%.

Sector performance told the rotation story clearly. The Technology Select Sector SPDR Fund lagged, down 1.1%. Meanwhile, the Materials Select Sector SPDR Fund outperformed dramatically, up 2.0%.

Russell 1000's Biggest Movers

The day's biggest winners in the Russell 1000 reflected the value stock rally. Vail Resorts jumped 8.60%, while The Mosaic Company surged 8.13%. Rocket Lab USA climbed 7.73%, Wayfair gained 7.62%, and Royal Caribbean Cruises advanced 6.82%.

Stock Name% Change
Vail Resorts, Inc.+8.60%
The Mosaic Company+8.13%
Rocket Lab USA, Inc.+7.73%
Wayfair Inc.+7.62%
Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd.+6.82%

On the losing side, Oracle led the decliners at -13.28%. Robinhood Markets dropped 7.87%, Medical Properties Trust fell 6.62%, Vertiv Holdings declined 5.82%, and The Trade Desk lost 5.57%.

Stock Name% Change
Oracle Corporation-13.28%
Robinhood Markets, Inc.-7.87%
Medical Properties Trust Inc.-6.62%
Vertiv Holdings Co-5.82%
The Trade Desk, Inc.-5.57%

The market's message Thursday was clear: investors are taking profits in expensive tech names and putting that money to work in areas that have lagged. Whether this rotation has legs or is just a brief pause in tech's dominance remains to be seen, but for now, the old economy is having its moment.

    Dow Surges to Record as Oracle's AI Spending Spooks Tech Investors - MarketDash News