Today: 14 July 2026
US stocks: A 922-point Dow tug-of-war masks broader Wall Street gains
14 July 2026
2 mins read

US stocks: A 922-point Dow tug-of-war masks broader Wall Street gains

NEW YORK, July 14, 2026, 16:08 EDT.

  • The S&P 500 rose 0.38% and the Nasdaq Composite gained 0.91%, while the Dow added just 0.05% in preliminary closing data.
  • Goldman Sachs generated an estimated 477-point Dow boost intraday, almost cancelling a 445-point drag from IBM . Goldman traded at $1,140, up 9.0%, near the close; IBM finished at $217.07, down 25.21%.
  • June consumer prices fell 0.4% from May, while the probability of the Federal Reserve holding rates steady in July rose to 83.4%.

An intraday 922-point two-stock tug-of-war inside the Dow masked a firmer U.S. close on Tuesday. Goldman added an estimated 477 points while IBM subtracted 445, yet preliminary data put the Dow’s net gain at only 28.92 points. The headline index barely moved; its largest drivers did.

The Dow is price-weighted — share prices, rather than company size, determine influence — giving Goldman’s four-digit stock price unusual force. That structure allowed one bank earnings beat to almost neutralise IBM’s 25% collapse. Index design mattered as much as direction.

The split came as investors received their first clear inflation relief in months. June CPI fell 0.4%, its biggest monthly decline since April 2020, while core prices were unchanged; annual headline and core inflation slowed to 3.5% and 2.6%, respectively. Rate futures showed an 83.4% chance of no Fed move in July, up from 58.3% on Monday. “It gives the Fed cover, for now,” said Chuck Carlson, chief executive of Horizon Investment Services. Investors got relief, not resolution. Bureau of Labor Statistics

BenchmarkPreliminary closePoint changePercentage change
Dow Jones Industrial Average52,527.56+28.92+0.05%
S&P 5007,544.03+28.69+0.38%
Nasdaq Composite26,109.65+236.48+0.91%

The gap between the Nasdaq and Dow showed that the near-flat blue-chip index was not a broad risk-off signal. A rebound in chip shares put the Nasdaq in front, while cooler inflation lowered the immediate pressure for a rate increase. The wider market was buying relief.

Goldman supplied the upside shock. Second-quarter profit reached $6.63 billion, or $20.98 a share, compared with the $14.48 analysts expected, while equities-trading revenue jumped 72% to a record $7.42 billion. “Momentum has accelerated throughout our businesses,” Chief Executive David Solomon said. Volatility paid. Goldman Sachs

Analysts at JPMorgan Chase , led by Kian Abouhossein, said the results “significantly exceeded expectations.” Goldman’s investment-banking fees rose 55% to $3.4 billion, and the firm advised on $1.2 trillion of announced mergers in the first half, about $425 billion more than its nearest rival. The earnings beat had depth. Reuters

Dow driverEstimated intraday index impactData behind the move
Goldman Sachs+477 pointsEPS of $20.98 versus $14.48 expected; equities revenue up 72%
IBM-445 pointsRevenue up 1%; software up 5%; infrastructure down 7%
Gross two-stock swing922 pointsPositive and negative impacts added together

IBM supplied the downside shock. Its preliminary revenue rose just 1% to $17.2 billion, with software growth of 5% offset by a 7% decline in infrastructure. Chief Executive Arvind Krishna said customers redirected spending toward servers, storage and memory, while several large deals failed to close on schedule. “This quarter we faltered. We did not adapt and move quickly enough,” he wrote. The punishment was for execution as much as demand. IBM Newsroom

The two stocks’ 922-point gross swing — the absolute positive and negative impacts added together — was about 32 times the Dow’s preliminary net move. That ratio shows how an almost unchanged price-weighted index can conceal violent repricing underneath. Stock selection mattered more than the average.

But the inflation relief may prove fragile. Energy prices fell 5.7% in June and produced the largest drag on CPI, yet renewed U.S.-Iran fighting lifted crude prices on Tuesday; rate futures still implied at least one quarter-point Fed increase before year-end. One soft print does not settle the rate path.

The next test is whether Tuesday’s divergence stays company-specific. IBM will release its complete results and discuss its full-year outlook on July 22, while the rest of earnings season will show whether Goldman’s trading and deal gains extend beyond one exceptional quarter. The market wants proof.

Jerzy Lewandowski is a senior markets editor at TS2.tech covering stocks, artificial intelligence, semiconductors and global financial markets. He studied economics at the University of Warsaw and previously worked in investment analysis before moving into financial journalism. His daily coverage focuses on the trends and events that matter most to investors worldwide. Follow Jerzy Lewandowski on Google News.

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  • Gartner, DXC sink after IBM warns on Q2 sales
    July 14, 2026, 5:37 PM EDT. Gartner and DXC Technology shares tumbled after IBM warned Q2 revenue would miss, as buyers shift focus to AI hardware instead of large consulting projects. IBM posted adjusted EPS of $2.93 on $17.2 billion revenue, missing analyst targets. CEO Arvind Krishna said clients are putting money into servers, storage, and chips as supplies tighten, holding off major software purchases. DXC slid deeper, with worries over weaker economic activity, inflation, higher oil, and yields. DXC is down 34.1% for the year, close to a five-year low as the sector faces pressure from geopolitical risks and possible Fed hikes.
Dow trades flat as two giants sway index by 922 points
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