S&P 500 Reaches Record High Close as Chipmakers Rally on Strong Performance
The S&P 500 reached a record high close of 6,966.28 points on Friday, gaining 0.65% as chipmakers led a broad market rally. The semiconductor sector surged 2.70% to record highs, with Intel jumping 11% after Trump's CEO meeting and Lam Research rising 8.70% on upgraded price targets. For the week, major indices posted strong gains with the S&P 500 up 1.60%, Nasdaq rising 1.90%, and Dow adding 2.30%, while mortgage lenders rallied on Trump's $200 billion bond purchase announcement.

*this image is generated using AI for illustrative purposes only.
Wall Street closed the first full week of 2026 on a strong note, with the S&P 500 rallying to a record high close driven by robust performance from chipmakers and other technology stocks. The benchmark index gained 0.65% to end at 6,966.28 points, while a weaker-than-expected jobs report had minimal impact on market expectations for Federal Reserve interest rate cuts.
Semiconductor Sector Leads Market Rally
Chip stocks dominated Friday's trading session, with the PHLX semiconductor index surging 2.70% to reach a record high. Several major technology companies contributed significantly to the market's upward momentum:
| Company | Price Movement | Key Details |
|---|---|---|
| Lam Research | +8.70% to $218.36 | Mizuho raised price target to $220 from $200 |
| Intel | +11.00% | Trump reported "great meeting" with CEO Lip-Bu Tan |
| Broadcom | +3.80% | Major contributor to S&P 500 gains |
| Alphabet | +1.00% | Supported index performance |
| Tesla | +2.10% | Added to Nasdaq strength |
Vistra emerged as another standout performer, jumping 10.50% after Meta Platforms announced an agreement to purchase power from the company's nuclear plants, highlighting the growing intersection between technology and energy infrastructure.
Broad Market Performance and Sector Rotation
The market rally extended beyond technology stocks, with nine of the eleven S&P 500 sector indexes posting gains. Materials led the sector performance with a 1.80% increase, followed by utilities which gained 1.24%. This broad-based strength reflected a notable shift toward previously underperforming sectors.
| Index | Daily Performance | Weekly Performance |
|---|---|---|
| S&P 500 | +0.65% to 6,966.28 | +1.60% |
| Nasdaq | +0.82% to 23,671.35 | +1.90% |
| Dow Jones | +0.48% to 49,504.07 | +2.30% |
The S&P 500 value index has climbed approximately 2.00% in 2026, outpacing the 1.00% gain in the S&P 500 growth index, underscoring the recent rotation toward previously lagging sectors.
Housing and Mortgage Sector Surge
Mortgage lenders experienced significant gains following Trump's announcement of plans to purchase $200.00 billion in mortgage bonds to reduce housing costs. The sector responded enthusiastically to this policy initiative:
- LoanDepot surged 19.30%
- Rocket Companies gained 9.60%
- Opendoor Technologies rallied 13.10%
- Philadelphia Housing index rose 5.70% to its highest level since October
Market Dynamics and Trading Activity
Trading volume reached 17.00 billion shares, exceeding the 20-session average of 16.40 billion shares. Market breadth remained positive, with advancing issues outnumbering declining ones within the S&P 500 by a 1.3-to-one ratio. The index recorded 48 new highs against only 6 new lows, while the Nasdaq posted 140 new highs compared to 62 new lows.
Current valuations show the S&P 500 trading at approximately 22 times expected earnings, down from 23 in November but still above the five-year average of 19. General Motors provided a notable exception to the day's positive sentiment, falling more than 2.00% after announcing a $6.00 billion charge to unwind certain electric-vehicle investments.



























