[BRIEFING.COM] The stock market opened to broad-based gains in response to optimism around trade tensions with China, though sector strength deteriorated throughout the day, with the major averages ultimately finishing well off their session highs.
The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (+0.7%) finished with the widest gains as tech and mega-cap stocks put up strong performances, while the S&P 500 (+0.4%) also captured a modest gain, and the DJIA finished flat. Meanwhile, the small-cap Russell 2000 (+1.0%) outperformed, while the S&P Mid Cap 400 (+0.1%) had a flattish performance.
All eleven S&P 500 sectors traded higher for much of the morning after Treasury Secretary Bessent suggested in a press conference that a longer trade truce could be achieved if China delays implementing its restrictions on rare earth exports.
The early gains pushed the major averages back near their record-high levels from last week, though eroding strength saw them dip beneath their flatlines in the early afternoon.
Although the information technology sector (+0.7%) gave back around half of its early gains, its strength remained key to today's index-level advance, especially after its weakness yesterday limited growth in the major averages despite broader market strength.
The sector was supported by strength in chipmakers after chip-making equipment manufacturer ASML (ASML 1009.81, +26.63, +2.71%) reported strong bookings in its Q3 earnings report this morning.
Advanced Micro Devices (AMD 238.60, +20.51, +9.40%) was one of the top-performing names in the S&P 500 today, and the PHLX Semiconductor Index closed with a 3.0% gain.
The communication services sector (+1.0%) also finished higher, as, like chipmakers, several mega-cap names shook off yesterday's retreat. Alphabet (GOOG 251.71, +5.52, +2.24%) and Meta Platforms (META 717.55, +8.90, +1.26%) were among the stocks that pushed the Vanguard Mega Cap Growth ETF (+0.6%) higher, though fading strength in the market's largest names throughout the session saw the S&P 500 Equal Weighted Index (+0.2%) close just slightly lower than the market-weighted S&P 500 (+0.4%).
The real estate (+1.5%) and utilities (+1.3%) sectors continued their run of outperformance this week.
While four S&P 500 sectors ultimately closed lower, only the materials (-0.5%) and industrials (-0.5%) sectors retreated more than 0.1%.
The industrials sector faced pressure in its defense names after Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent suggested that the Trump administration may ask defense contractors to scale back stock buybacks in favor of increased research and development spending to support national security.
The iShares U.S. Aerospace and Defense ETF retreated 1.5%.
On the earnings front, the market faced a busy slate of reports, and mixed reactions to several names in the financials sector (-0.1%) left the sector hovering near its flatline by the close.
Morgan Stanley (MS 162.65, +7.31, +4.71%) and Bank of America (BAC 52.28, +2.19, +4.37%) captured solid gains in response to their earnings beats, while PNC (PNC 182.34, -7.39, -3.90%) faced pressure due to downside guidance and Progressive (PGR 226.50, -13.90, -5.78%) slipped on an earnings miss.
Macro developments were relatively thin today, though the market remains vulnerable to volatility in response to trade tensions with China.
The Fed's October Beige Book showed that overall economic activity was little changed from the previous period, which in turn had little effect on the major averages.
Rate cut expectations remain high, and the government remains shut down, leaving investors focused mostly on corporate earnings and trade headlines for direction. Despite the retreat from earlier highs, the market's resilience in the face of recent pullbacks shows that risk appetite is still holding up, though the recent intraday swings suggest a more cautious tone underneath the surface.
U.S. Treasuries finished Wednesday with losses across the curve after reversing from their mostly higher start. The 2-year note yield settled up two basis points to 3.50%, and the 10-year note yield settled up two basis points to 4.05%.
Reviewing today's data: