Stocks Get Tech Boost to Hit Fresh All-Time Highs: Markets Wrap
(Bloomberg) — A rally in technology giants drove stocks to all-time highs, overshadowing data showing a resurgence in inflation that fueled wagers the Federal Reserve will keep rates higher for longer.
Megacaps led gains in the S&P 500, with the chiefs from Nvidia Corp., Tesla Inc. and Apple Inc. joining President Donald Trump’s business delegation to China. A drop in oil also helped sentiment. A $25 billion sale of 30-year bonds saw investors snagging 5% yields on those maturities for the first time since 2007. In late hours, Cisco Systems Inc. gave a solid outlook.
The six-week surge in equities to a series of records is defying concerns about the economic fallout of the war in Iran. Stocks can rally further as a recovery in earnings and still-low positioning outweigh the threat from higher bond yields, said Max Kettner at HSBC Holdings Plc.
Morgan Stanley strategists are turning more positive on US equities in a bet that profits and a strong economy will keep the bull market running. The team led by Mike Wilson expects the S&P 500 to reach 8,300 in the next 12 months. The gauge is currently trading near 7,444.
“Resiliency in earnings data despite geopolitical risk, private credit concerns and AI disruption is supportive of our view,” he said.
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Meantime, back-to-back inflation reports this week showed mounting price pressures, pushing traders to boost wagers on a Fed hike in the coming year.
The producer price index rose 6% in April from a year ago, topping all estimates in a Bloomberg survey of economists. The monthly gain was also the sharpest since 2022. The core gauge climbed 5.2% from April 2025 — the most in more than three years.
“Wednesday’s PPI was strikingly elevated as producers are feeling the ripple effects of $100 per barrel oil,” said Clark Bellin at Bellwether Wealth. “The Federal Reserve has an inflation problem on its hands.”
Several components of the PPI are of particular interest as they feed into the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge — the personal consumption expenditures price index. The flip side is that increases in components feeding into the PCE deflator were modest by comparison to pressure elsewhere, said Gary Schlossberg at Wells Fargo Investment Institute.
“One takeaway is that companies are not passing through costs to consumers across the board just yet,” noted Chris Low at FHN Financial. “But company input costs are sharply higher, which obviously increases pressure to pass through costs in future.”
Corporate Highlights:
Elon Musk’s xAI has recruited multiple Wall Street firms with ties to the billionaire’s business empire to test its Grok chatbot, according to people familiar with the matter, part of a push to bolster revenue ahead of parent company SpaceX’s initial public offering. Anthropic PBC is in early talks with investors to raise at least $30 billion in fresh financing, according to people familiar with the matter, setting the stage for what could be its largest funding round yet. Ford Motor Co. jumped after Morgan Stanley issued a bullish call that the automaker’s energy storage business could soon make a deal with hyperscalers. Transformative events like the Iran conflict and the rise of artificial intelligence are creating increased demand for Honeywell International Inc.’s products ahead of its split later this month, according to the company’s chief executive officer. Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. and Tencent Holdings Ltd. reported revenue that fell short of estimates, signaling the challenges in translating higher spending on AI into faster growth. What Bloomberg strategists say…
“If rates rise further as traders expect, the burden of higher borrowing costs is likely to be the biggest for assets that have seen the most spectacular rallies.”
—Kristine Aquino, Macro Strategist, Markets Live. For the full analysis, click here.
Some of the main moves in markets:
Stocks
The S&P 500 rose 0.6% as of 4 p.m. New York time The Nasdaq 100 rose 1% The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 0.1% The MSCI World Index rose 0.6% Currencies
The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index was little changed The euro fell 0.3% to $1.1709 The British pound fell 0.1% to $1.3521 The Japanese yen fell 0.2% to 157.87 per dollar Cryptocurrencies
Bitcoin fell 1.3% to $79,619.9 Ether fell 1.2% to $2,256.49 Bonds
The yield on 10-year Treasuries was little changed at 4.47% Germany’s 10-year yield was little changed at 3.10% Britain’s 10-year yield declined four basis points to 5.06% The yield on 2-year Treasuries declined one basis point to 3.98% The yield on 30-year Treasuries advanced two basis points to 5.04% Commodities
West Texas Intermediate crude fell 0.8% to $101.40 a barrel Spot gold fell 0.6% to $4,686.40 an ounce ©2026 Bloomberg L.P.