Briefing.com

Daily Sector Wrap

Updated: 14-May-26 16:32 ET
Closing Market Summary: AI momentum pushes stocks to more record highs

Sustained enthusiasm across the AI trade sent the S&P 500 (+0.8%) and Nasdaq Composite (+0.9%) to fresh record highs again today, while the DJIA (+0.8%) reclaimed and closed above the 50,000 mark.

There was relatively firmer participation across the broader market today, which helped the DJIA keep pace with the other major indices, but its gain is also largely due to an impressive post-earnings rally from Cisco (CSCO 115.53, +13.66, +13.41%). The company decidedly topped earnings expectations and issued much better-than-expected Q4 guidance driven by accelerating AI infrastructure demand and broad-based networking strength.

Cisco's gain made it the top-performing component of the information technology sector (+1.9%) and the S&P 500 as a whole.

The world's largest company by market capitalization, NVIDIA (NVDA 235.74, +9.92, +4.39%), also posted a solid gain today that leaves it on the doorstep of a double-digit gain for the week. Reuters reported that the U.S. approved sales of the company's H200 chip to ten Chinese companies, while UBS raised its price target on the stock to $275 from $245.

NVIDIA's gain helped the PHLX Semiconductor Index (+0.5%) finish higher despite some profit-taking after yesterday's rally. Meanwhile, software stocks outperformed, sending the iShares GS Software ETF 2.3% higher. 

The eagerly anticipated IPO of Cerebras Systems (CBRS 311.07, +126.07, +68.15%) added to today's AI momentum, with the upsized 30.0 million-share deal pricing at $185 per share, well above the already raised $150-$160 range, before opening at $350 for an 89% first-trade gain. The deal underscores the huge appetite for pure-play AI infrastructure exposure, but it also leaves investors staring at a nose-bleed valuation with a market cap near $70 billion and a price-to-sales multiple close to 140x.

Elsewhere, gains were more modest, with six total S&P 500 sectors finishing higher. The energy sector (+0.8%) was a top performer amid a modest increase in oil prices, though geopolitical headlines remained muted today, with the summit between President Trump and Chinese President Xi producing little in the way of surprises.

Mega-cap stocks outside of the technology sector faced some profit-taking after yesterday's rally, which contributed to weakness in the consumer discretionary (-0.3%) and communication services (-0.2%) sectors.

The materials (-0.8%) and real estate (-0.6%) sectors underperformed.

Outside of the S&P 500, the Russell 2000 (+0.7%) and S&P Mid Cap 400 (+0.4%) captured decent gains.

Overall, it was another winning session for stocks as the AI trade was supported by several catalysts, while the broader market fared better than in recent sessions marked by narrow leadership. Weaker breadth has prompted some analyst concerns around stretched valuations and the potential for speculative excess across AI-linked names, but the exceptionally strong Q1 earnings season and continued flow of supportive catalysts have helped reinforce confidence in the rally and provide meaningful fundamental support for many of the market's leaders. Additionally, investors have consistently stepped in to buy recent pullbacks across semiconductors and mega-cap tech stocks, reinforcing the market's momentum and helping keep the major averages near record territory.

U.S. Treasuries finished Thursday on a mostly higher note, though intraday action saw a pullback in shorter tenors while the long end outperfo rmed, hanging onto the bulk of today's starting gains. The 2-year note yield finished unchanged at 3.99%, and the 10-year note yield settled down two basis points to 4.46%.  

  • Russell 2000: +15.2% YTD
  • Nasdaq Composite: +14.6% YTD
  • S&P Mid Cap 400: +11.0% YTD
  • S&P 500: +9.6% YTD
  • DJIA: +4.2% YTD

Reviewing today's data:

  • April Retail Sales 0.5% (Briefing.com consensus 0.4%); Prior was revised to 1.6% from 1.7%, April Retail Sales, ex-auto 0.7% (Briefing.com consensus 0.4%); Prior 1.9%
    • The key takeaway from the report is that solid spending activity was seen across most retail categories in April, which is when consumers were digesting the gas price shock from the Iran war. Excluding auto and gasoline station sales, retail sales were up 0.5% month-over-month.
  • Weekly Initial Claims 211K (Briefing.com consensus 208K); Prior was revised to 199K from 200K, Weekly Continuing Claims 1.782 mln; Prior was revised to 1.758 mln from 1.766 mln
    • The key takeaway from the report is that, even though initial and continuing jobless claims were up in the latest week, neither has risen to a level that would ring alarm bells about a serious deterioration in the labor market.
  • April Import Prices 1.9%; Prior was revised to 0.9% from 0.8%
  • April Import Price ex-oil 0.8%; Prior was revised to 0.2% from 0.6%
  • April Export Prices 3.3%; Prior was revised to 1.5% from 1.6%
  • April Export Prices ex-ag. 3.4%; Prior was revised to 1.6% from 1.7%
  • March Business Inventories 0.9% (Briefing.com consensus 0.3%); Prior 0.4%

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