Dow Hits Record as PC Makers, Chipmakers Rally Into Memorial Day Weekend

U.S. stocks closed higher on Friday as strength in technology and health care names lifted the major indexes into the long Memorial Day weekend. The Dow Jones Industrial Average set a fresh all-time high, while the S&P 500 notched its eighth consecutive winning week — the longest such streak since late 2023. Investors weighed record-low consumer sentiment and elevated gas prices against easing Treasury yields and continued optimism around U.S.-Iran peace talks.

What Moved Markets

The Dow Jones Industrial Average climbed 294.04 points, or 0.58%, to close at a record 50,579.70. The S&P 500 rose 27.75 points, or 0.37%, to finish at 7,473.47. The Nasdaq Composite gained 0.19% to end at 26,343.97. The Russell 2000 was the day’s strongest performer, jumping 0.91% as small caps continued to benefit from broadening risk appetite.

The session got a lift from falling Treasury yields, with the 10-year declining 2.6 basis points to 4.558%, offering relief after a punishing stretch for bonds. Geopolitics remained a factor as both the U.S. and Iran signaled progress in talks to end the Middle East conflict, though sticking points around Iran’s uranium stockpile and Strait of Hormuz tolls kept a deal from being finalized. Oil prices climbed, with West Texas Intermediate rising 1.8% to $98.05 and Brent gaining 2.3% to $105, on persistent supply concerns. The average gasoline price stood at $4.55 per gallon heading into the holiday weekend — the highest Memorial Day reading since 2022.

Separately, Kevin Warsh was formally sworn in as Federal Reserve Chair in a White House ceremony, succeeding Jerome Powell. Fed Governor Christopher Waller warned that inflation is “not headed in the right direction,” citing elevated energy prices and rising long-term inflation expectations. The University of Michigan’s final May consumer sentiment reading fell to 44.8, a new record low, as consumers fretted over gasoline costs and their spread into broader prices.

Notable Movers

Dell Technologies (DELL) and HP Inc. (HPQ) each surged more than 15% after Lenovo posted record quarterly revenue powered by AI-related sales that nearly doubled. The blowout results from the Chinese PC giant lifted the entire personal computer and server hardware space.

Qualcomm (QCOM) extended its post-earnings rally with another 11% gain on Friday, pushing the chipmaker up 18% on the week and more than 50% since its fiscal second-quarter results on April 29. AMD (AMD) rose roughly 8% after Bank of America raised its server CPU market forecast to $125 billion by 2030, citing growing processor demand for AI workloads.

IMAX (IMAX) jumped 15% on reports the cinema technology company is exploring a potential sale. CEO Rich Gelfond previously told shareholders he was open to a deal. Estee Lauder (EL) rallied 10% after confirming it had ended merger discussions with Spanish beauty group Puig, removing an overhang that had weighed on the stock.

On the downside, Futu Holdings (FUTU) plunged 36% after China’s securities regulator launched a crackdown on illegal cross-border brokerage activity, ordering the firm and rivals to stop accepting new mainland clients and wind down domestic operations. Reddit (RDDT) fell 6% after Meta launched a standalone app called Forum that analysts at Truist flagged as a direct competitor to Reddit’s online discussion platform.

Looking Ahead

Markets are closed Monday for Memorial Day, with trading resuming Tuesday. Investors will return to a market pulled in competing directions. The S&P 500’s eight-week winning streak and the Dow’s record close suggest broad confidence, but record-low consumer sentiment, $4.55 gas, and a new Fed chair navigating inflation pressures present clear risks. The U.S.-Iran talks remain a wildcard for oil and risk assets alike. Meanwhile, the SpaceX IPO — targeting a $1.75 trillion valuation and a June 12 listing — continues to dominate investor attention, with retail traders already piling into space-related proxies. Some strategists have warned that a wave of mega-IPOs from SpaceX, OpenAI, and Anthropic could mark a market top, drawing parallels to the late 1990s.


Posted

in

, , ,

by

Tags: