Dow Hits Record High as Apple Slump Drags NASDAQ Lower; Micron Earnings Boost Semiconductors

The US stock market showed a sharp divergence on Thursday as investors rotated away from large-cap technology stocks. Apple led the decline, falling nearly 5% after announcing price increases on several MacBook and iPad models, which dragged the NASDAQ Composite into negative territory. In contrast, the Dow Jones Industrial Average surged 598 points (1.1%) to a record close, supported by gains in financial, healthcare, and industrial shares.

The S&P 500 managed a modest 0.4% gain, reflecting broader market resilience outside the tech sector. Apple’s price hikes—attributed to rising memory and storage chip costs driven by AI data-center demand—raised concerns about margin pressure across the technology industry. Alphabet, Meta Platforms, NVIDIA, Amazon, and Microsoft also declined, while SpaceX shares fell about 1%.

Micron Technology provided a bright spot, reporting fiscal third-quarter earnings above expectations and issuing a strong outlook. The memory-chip maker’s shares initially jumped over 15% before paring gains, briefly pushing its market value above $1.4 trillion. Qualcomm also gained after raising its long-term revenue forecast for non-smartphone businesses to $40 billion by fiscal 2029. Other semiconductor stocks such as Sandisk, Western Digital, KLA, and Applied Materials advanced, but these gains were insufficient to offset the losses among the largest tech names.

The Dow’s record performance was fueled by strong moves in Johnson & Johnson, JPMorgan Chase, and Caterpillar. Additionally, Alphabet is set to join the Dow Jones Industrial Average on June 29, replacing Verizon Communications. This sector rotation indicates investors are not fleeing equities but rather reallocating capital based on earnings, product costs, and valuations.

On the macroeconomic front, May’s Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) price index rose 0.4% month-over-month, slightly below the expected 0.5%. Annual headline inflation reached 4.1%, matching forecasts and marking its highest level in over three years. Core PCE increased 0.3% monthly and 3.4% annually, both in line with estimates. Consumer spending grew, and first-quarter GDP was revised up to an annualized 2.1%. Treasury yields edged lower, with the 10-year yield falling to about 4.37%.

Brian Jacobsen of Annex Wealth Management noted that the worst of inflation and consumer angst may be behind us, but cautioned that inflation expectations depend on gasoline prices trending lower. The data keeps questions about future Federal Reserve policy open.

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