Wall Street closed higher for a fifth consecutive session on Wednesday, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average gaining approximately 300 points to reach a fresh record high as investors welcomed weaker-than-expected inflation signals.
The S&P 500 also hit an intraday record of 6,937 despite mixed breadth, though technology stocks like Nvidia pulled back sharply as the Intel 18A testing pause weighed on semiconductor sentiment.
Trading was compressed into the early 1:00 PM ET close, limiting volume and exaggerating moves as Wall Street headed into the Christmas holiday.
Wall Street close: What moved the market today
The Dow’s 0.6% climb marked leadership by blue-chip financials, industrials, and defensive stocks, a rotation away from mega-cap technology that dominated Tuesday’s session.
Initial jobless claims fell to 214,000 for the week ending December 20, beating expectations of 220,000 and marking the second consecutive weekly decline.
The numbers reassured traders that the labor market wasn’t deteriorating despite November’s unemployment rate hitting a four-year high of 4.6%.
The data suggested the economy had enough resilience to avoid aggressive Fed rate cuts, supporting the case for a later 2026 rate-cut schedule.
However, technology shares struggled on the day. Nvidia fell 0.32%, closing at $188.61, as fallout from the Intel 18A pause continued to pressure semiconductor sentiment.
The broader Nasdaq dipped slightly below the neutral line as investors recalibrate AI and chip exposure ahead of the holiday break.
Meanwhile, the S&P 500 remained essentially flat but achieved an intraday record of 6,937 points, suggesting that while headline indices expanded, underlying breadth remained uneven.
Consumer staples and industrials outperformed, signaling that traders were rotating into more defensive and cyclical positioning rather than pushing all-in on tech.
Gold surged above $4,500 per ounce as geopolitical tensions in Venezuela and expectations for eventual Fed rate cuts drove safe-haven demand.
Oil prices held steady after recent gains, while volatility metrics remained compressed heading into the holiday.
What this means for investors
The Santa Claus Rally, historically the market’s strongest seasonal period (last five trading days of December plus first two of January), typically delivers an average 1.3% return 78% of the time.
Investors should monitor three signals into year-end: (1) any commentary from Federal Reserve officials hinting at January patience on rate cuts; (2) upcoming retail sales and housing data that could shake conviction about economic durability; and (3) whether breadth expands or contracts into the new year.
The early 1:00 PM close compresses liquidity, meaning moves can reverse quickly when normal trading resumes on Friday.
The real risk is that markets have priced in two rate cuts for 2026 while Fed guidance suggests just one.
If January data re-accelerates inflation, that mismatch could trigger a sharp correction.
For now, the Dow’s record close provides a firmer footing than Nvidia’s retreat, a signal that durable economic strength, not just AI exuberance, is driving the year-end rally.
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