
The New York stock market rallied significantly on Wednesday, marking its second consecutive day of substantial gains.
The surge was fueled by optimistic statements from U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and U.S. President Donald Trump regarding a potential big deal in U.S.-China trade negotiations, raising hopes for a resolution to the ongoing trade dispute.
Tesla’s stock jumped sharply despite disappointing quarterly results released after the previous day’s market close. The rally was sparked after CEO Elon Musk announced his plans to return to company leadership next month and confirmed that the development of a low-cost electric vehicle is progressing according to schedule.
Notably, semiconductor stocks showed particular strength during the trading session.
Market Rally Extends for the Second Day
All three major New York stock indices posted significant gains for the second consecutive day, with technology stocks leading the charge.
The tech-heavy Nasdaq composite surged 407.63 points (2.50%) to close at 16,708.05. The S&P 500, which has seen an increase in its technology sector weighting, jumped 88.10 points (1.67%) to reach 5,375.86.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average, comprising 30 blue-chip stocks, also rose but lagged behind the Nasdaq and S&P 500. The Dow finished up 419.59 points (1.07%) at 39,606.57.
The Wall Street Fear Gauge dipped below 30 points. The Chicago Board Options Exchange (CBOE) Volatility Index (VIX) fell 2.12 points (6.93%) to 28.45.
M7 Lead the Rally
The Magnificent Seven big tech stocks led the market’s upward momentum.
Tesla shares soared 12.77 USD (5.37%) to 250.74 USD, while Nvidia climbed 3.82 USD (3.86%) to 102.71 USD.
Apple gained 4.86 USD (2.43%) to close at 204.60 USD, and Alphabet rose 3.82 USD (2.48%) to 157.72 USD.
Microsoft finished the day up 7.57 USD (2.06%) at 374.39 USD.
Amazon jumped 7.42 USD (4.29%) to 180.69 USD, and Meta Platforms surged 19.99 USD (4.00%) to 520.27 USD.
Although the European Union announced fines of 500 million EUR (about 533 million USD) against Apple and 200 million EUR (about 213 million USD) against Meta, they appeared to have little impact on their stock prices.
Semiconductor Sector Shines
Semiconductor stocks rallied on growing optimism about a potential resolution to the U.S.-China trade dispute.
Despite lingering concerns over Trump’s threat of semiconductor tariffs and tightened export controls to China, investors seemed to bet on reduced pressure from China on U.S. chip makers.
AMD surged 4.13 USD (4.79%) to 90.39 USD, while Broadcom jumped 7.33 USD (4.32%) to close at 176.91 USD.
Intel Corporation saw its stock price climb 1.08 USD (5.54%) to 20.59 USD, boosted by reports of potential workforce reductions of up to 20%.
The Philadelphia Semiconductor Index (SOX) rose 151.87 points (3.96%) to 3,983.92.