Daily Sector Wrap
| Updated: 07-May-26 16:28 ET |
| Closing Market Summary: Software strength eases broad pullback from record highs |
The stock market pulled back from this morning's record-highs as oil prices bounced off their earlier lows, with broad weakness sending the S&P 500 (-0.4%), Nasdaq Composite (-0.1%), and DJIA (-0.6%) lower. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite did manage to capture fresh all-time highs, as a strong showing from software stocks and resilience across mega-cap names initially pushed the indices higher despite relative weakness in the broader market. The information technology sector (+0.1%) managed a slightly higher finish, but gave up most of its gain that exceeded 1.0% earlier in the session. Software stocks still posted impressive gains, buoyed by several monster rallies across the latest batch of names to report earnings. Datadog (DDOG 188.73, +45.02, +31.33%) and Fortinet (FTNT 107.97, +18.02, +20.03%) were the best-performing S&P 500 components, contributing to the iShares GS Software ETF's (+3.6%) solid gain. Meanwhile, semiconductor stocks faced some profit-taking after yesterday's rally, sending the PHLX Semiconductor Index 2.7% lower. NVIDIA (NVDA 211.38, +3.55, +1.71%), however, managed a higher finish, which, in conjunction with Microsoft's (MSFT 420.92, +6.96, +1.68%) gain, helped the sector avoid a loss for the day. Relative strength across other "magnificent seven" names kept the communication services sector (+0.1%) in positive territory and kept losses modest in the consumer discretionary sector (-0.2%). However, those sectors gave up most of their earlier gains following the intraday bounce in oil prices. Crude oil traded firmly lower for much of the morning amid lingering optimism that the U.S. and Iran could soon strike a peace deal. Oil bounced off its early lows just before midday, further pressuring the broader market and eroding gains across the technology sector. Crude oil futures ultimately settled today's session $0.33 lower (-0.4%) at $94.89 per barrel. The U.S. is still awaiting Iran's response to an updated peace proposal, though a senior Iranian official said Iran will not allow the U.S. to reopen the Strait of Hormuz with "an unrealistic plan", according to The Wall Street Journal. Even with the intraday bounce in oil prices, the energy sector (-1.8%) finished as one of the worst-performing S&P 500 sectors. The materials (-1.8%) and industrials (-1.6%) sectors posted similar losses. Profit-taking in Caterpillar (CAT 895.26, -31.38, -3.39%) and weakness across electrical product names weighed on industrials, while DuPont (DD 48.37, -1.70, -3.40%), Intl Flavors (IFF 78.26, -4.67, -5.63%), and other recent post-earnings winners pressured materials. Meanwhile, the latest batch of earnings reports outside of the software space lacked the broader market impact seen earlier this week. McDonald's (MCD 283.66, -0.44, -0.15%), Arm Holdings plc (ARM 213.33, -23.97, -10.10%), and DoorDash (DASH 171.35, +3.38, +2.01%) were among the more notable names to report, though their results did little to alter the overall tone of the session. Outside of the S&P 500, the Russell 2000 (-1.6%) and S&P Mid Cap 400 (-1.2%) finished with notably steeper losses than the major averages, reflecting the softer tone across the broader market. Despite today's pullback, the losses remained relatively modest in the context of the market's recent run to record highs. Software stocks provided a notable area of strength following another solid round of earnings reports, though the intraday rebound in oil prices and profit-taking across cyclical areas of the market weighed on broader participation throughout the afternoon. U.S. Treasuries tried to extend their midweek rally, but some early resistance invited an intraday pullback from two days of gains. The 2-year note yield settled up five basis points to 3.92%, and the 10-year note yield settled up four basis points to 4.39%.
Reviewing today's data:
|
|
|