Site icon Smallcaps Daily

Stock Market Today: S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq Rise After Cooler-Than-Expected CPI Eases Rate Fears

a remote control sitting on top of a table

U.S. stocks rose on Friday as investors welcomed softer-than-expected inflation data, helping to steady sentiment after a volatile stretch driven by concerns about the AI sector and broad market selling. The S&P 500 led gains with a rise of roughly 0.6%, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average and Nasdaq Composite added about 0.4% and 0.5%, respectively.

Despite the rebound, major indexes remained on track for weekly losses following Thursday’s sharp sell-off, when concerns about AI disruption spilled into traditionally defensive sectors. The latest Consumer Price Index report showed prices rose 0.2% in January and 2.4% year over year, reinforcing expectations that the Federal Reserve could begin cutting interest rates later this year.

Market Movers:

Inflation Data Reshapes Fed Expectations

January’s cooler inflation reading revived expectations that interest-rate cuts could begin as early as June, though markets still anticipate only gradual easing through the end of 2026. The data arrives at a delicate moment for policymakers, as they balance resilient employment trends against signs of slowing consumer demand.

Energy prices provided partial relief to households, with gasoline and fuel oil costs declining on both a monthly and annual basis. However, electricity and natural-gas prices remained elevated compared with a year ago, underscoring persistent structural pressures tied to rising power demand from AI-driven data-center expansion.

Earnings and AI Themes Continue to Drive Volatility

Corporate results remained a central market catalyst. Strength in semiconductor and EV-related names contrasted sharply with steep declines in certain digital-platform and consumer-exposed companies, highlighting how uneven the current earnings landscape has become. At the same time, debate continues around the scale of AI investment and its ripple effects across industries. While some companies are benefiting directly from infrastructure spending, others face mounting questions about disruption risk, keeping volatility elevated across sectors.

Looking Ahead

Investors now turn toward upcoming economic data and additional earnings reports for confirmation that inflation is cooling without a sharp deterioration in growth. Any shift in labor-market strength or consumer spending could quickly reshape expectations for Federal Reserve policy. For now, Friday’s rebound suggests markets remain highly sensitive to incremental macro signals. Whether the recovery can extend beyond a short-term relief rally will likely depend on the next wave of data—and on whether confidence in the AI-driven investment cycle stabilizes in the weeks ahead.

Exit mobile version