NEW YORK, Feb 8, 2026, 12:16 EST — Market closed
The Dow Jones Industrial Average surged past the 50,000 mark for the first time Friday, wrapping up the session at a record 50,115.67. That’s a gain of 1,206.95 points, or 2.47%. Caterpillar rallied 7.1%, delivering the biggest lift to the blue-chip gauge. “The broadening that we have seen in the market” is showing, according to Chuck Carlson, chief executive at Horizon Investment Services. So far this year, the Dow is up 4.3%, beating both the S&P 500 and Nasdaq. Because the index is price-weighted, pricier shares like Caterpillar have an outsized impact. (Reuters)
U.S. stock markets are closed over the weekend, but the focus is shifting to a rejiggered economic data schedule that could put the Dow’s fresh milestone to the test when the bell rings Monday. The Bureau of Labor Statistics has pushed the January Employment Situation report to Feb. 11, and the consumer price index for January will now drop on Feb. 13, both at 8:30 a.m. ET, according to an updated posting. A funding lapse forced the changes, the agency’s release calendar confirms. (bls.gov)
Chip stocks snapped back hard on Friday, overshadowing Amazon’s 5.6% drop after it flagged plans to ramp AI infrastructure spending by over 50% this year—the same playbook Alphabet rolled out days earlier. Nvidia jumped 7.8%. The Philadelphia SE Semiconductor Index shot up 5.7%. That helped push the S&P 500 to a 1.97% gain and the Nasdaq up 2.18%. For the week: the Dow climbed 2.5%, but the Nasdaq still closed down 1.9%. “There’s real demand for AI products … and a necessity of a lot of spending to get there,” said Ross Mayfield, investment strategy analyst at Baird. (Reuters)
The 50,000 print arrives following a bumpy run for AI software stocks, with another wave of skepticism over if those hefty budgets will show up as profits this year. That back-and-forth has been yanking capital across the tape, sometimes shifting from one moment to the next.
With macro releases now shuffled on the calendar, each incoming data point carries more weight ahead of the Fed’s next meeting. “The coming week sees the delayed publication of official US labor market and inflation data,” S&P Global economists Chris Williamson and Jingyi Pan noted. They’re looking for January payrolls to rise by 70,000, unemployment steady at 4.4%, and earnings growth slipping to 3.6%. (S&P Global)
Earnings remain the big variable. Traders are tracking the Dow’s consumer and tech stocks to see if results hold up even as the market weighs what’s next for rates.
Coca-Cola has penciled in its Q4 2025 earnings call for Feb. 10, set for 8:30 a.m. ET—an event that could sway views on consumer staples across the Dow. (The Coca-Cola Company)
Cisco’s set to release its fiscal Q2 results on Feb. 11, with the earnings call slated for 1:30 p.m. PT. It’s an update that investors often watch for signals on corporate tech budgets and networking trends, especially as data-center construction ramps up. (investor.cisco.com)
McDonald’s heads into the spotlight as it prepares to release its fourth-quarter 2025 earnings on Feb. 11, a Zacks note posted on Nasdaq’s site says. (Nasdaq)
The Dow crossing that milestone? That could trigger some profit-taking, especially if data lands stronger than investors are bracing for—or if bond yields jump, signaling that rate cuts might get pushed back. There’s also the plain fact: big, round numbers grab attention, make headlines, then fade fast as traders look elsewhere.
Wall Street reopens Monday, with the Dow’s grip on 50,000 in focus as investors brace for the Feb. 11 jobs report and the CPI numbers due Feb. 13.