NEW YORK, February 7, 2026, 13:32 EST — Market closed.
- XLI finished Friday with a 2.9% gain, closing at $173.18—a fresh 52-week high.
- For the first time, the Dow closed above 50,000, lifted in large part by Caterpillar.
- Traders are now eyeing next week’s delayed U.S. jobs and inflation numbers, searching for the next cue on interest rates.
Industrial names in the U.S. wrapped up the week on a strong note. The Industrial Select Sector SPDR Fund (XLI) surged 2.86% Friday, closing at $173.18, right at the high end of its 52-week range. 1
The surge stood out, fueled by a shift out of the concentrated tech play and into stocks more exposed to capital investment and the broader economy. The Dow Jones Industrial Average crossed 50,000 for the first time ever, with Caterpillar jumping 7.1% to $726.20. “What’s driven it recently has been the broadening that we have seen in the market,” said Chuck Carlson, CEO at Horizon Investment Services. 2
U.S. stocks finished with a sharp rebound Friday, snapping back after a tough stretch for parts of the market. Industrials led the surge: the S&P 500 industrials sector closed at a record, up 2.84%. The Dow jumped 2.47%. S&P 500 advanced 1.97%. Those numbers come from a Reuters market wrap. 3
XLI, an exchange-traded fund tracking the Industrial Select Sector Index, gives investors exposure to the industrial side of the S&P 500. By Feb. 5, its largest positions were General Electric, Caterpillar, RTX, and Boeing. Machinery and aerospace and defense stocks make up significant pieces of the fund’s portfolio. 4
For investors, industrials often serve as a quick pulse check on whether optimism is breaking out past megacap tech and picking up steam in transport, machinery, and defense-related stocks. But that same exposure leaves the sector open to setbacks if growth falters or input costs spike unexpectedly.
Earnings stories landed on both sides of the tape for industrials. Rockwell Automation dropped almost 8% after trimming its full-year profit guidance, though the company still expects sales to hover at about $8.8 billion. CEO Blake Moret cited a “fluid” macro environment, flagging shaky trade flows and supply chain pressures on the call. CFO Christian Rothe added that tariffs knocked roughly 30 basis points—0.30 percentage point—off margins in one segment. 5
Interest rates remain a sticking point. San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly called the labor market “precarious” and voiced support for “additional cuts.” Capital Economics’ Thomas Ryan flagged December’s decline in job openings, cautioning that it might stoke fresh concerns about a softening jobs market. 6
Industrial bulls face a clear risk here. Should the next round of macro data tilt expectations toward fewer rate cuts, the sector’s recent surge could unravel quickly. Add tariff ambiguity or even a whiff of weaker factory demand in the back half, and these stocks may sell off harder than the broader market.
Next week stands out on the data front, with several releases delayed from their usual slots. The Labor Department’s reporting hiccup pushed the January U.S. jobs report to Wednesday, Feb. 11 at 8:30 a.m. ET, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Investors will also be watching for the January CPI inflation numbers, now scheduled for Friday, Feb. 13 at 8:30 a.m. ET. 7