NEW YORK, June 30, 2026, 11:02 EDT
- Dow turns higher after Monday’s first close above 52,000
- Caterpillar and Apple supplied about 210 Dow points in morning trade, more than the index’s 159-point gain
- NYSE decliners outnumbered advancers even as the Dow stayed near a record
- Job openings beat forecasts, while consumer confidence missed
The New York Stock Exchange was in a normal Tuesday session. Its core session runs from 9:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. ET, and its next full holiday close is Friday, July 3, for Independence Day observed.
At about 11 a.m. EDT, the Dow Jones Industrial Average (INDEXDJX:.DJI) was quoted near 52,276, up about 94 points, or 0.18%. The S&P 500 (INDEXSP:.INX) was up 0.48% and the Nasdaq Composite (INDEXNASDAQ:.IXIC) rose 0.95%, with tech again doing more of the work than the blue-chip tape.
| Index | Latest quoted level | Change |
|---|---|---|
| Dow Jones Industrial Average (INDEXDJX:.DJI) | 52,276.37 | +93.63 / +0.18% |
| S&P 500 (INDEXSP:.INX) | 7,475.92 | +35.49 / +0.48% |
| Nasdaq Composite (INDEXNASDAQ:.IXIC) | 26,066.04 | +245.89 / +0.95% |
The cleaner trade was not the Dow’s fresh high. It was the split inside it. Caterpillar Inc NYSE:CAT and Apple Inc NASDAQ:AAPL together added roughly 210 points to the Dow at 10:36 a.m. ET, more than the index’s 159-point rise at that time. That leaves the other 28 stocks with an implied net drag of about 51 points.
| Dow point math | Stock move | Dow-point impact |
|---|---|---|
| Caterpillar Inc NYSE:CAT | +$30.91 | about +184 |
| Apple Inc NASDAQ:AAPL | +$4.41 | about +26 |
| Combined CAT + AAPL | +$35.32 | about +210 |
| Dow move cited at 10:36 a.m. ET | — | +159 |
| Implied rest of Dow | — | about -51 |
For investors, that point split matters. The Dow closed above 52,000 for the first time on Monday, its 18th record close of 2026 and its fourth 1,000-point milestone this year. But Tuesday’s tape showed less breadth than the record level suggests. MarketWatch said each $1 change in a Dow component was worth about 5.94 index points on Tuesday.
Reuters said declining issues outnumbered advancers by 1.33-to-1 on the NYSE and 1.29-to-1 on Nasdaq at 10:08 a.m. ET. At that time, the Dow was up just 3.72 points at 52,186.46, the S&P 500 was up 0.34% and the Nasdaq was up 0.76%.
“Investors can’t see an end in sight to this bull run,” said David Morrison, senior market analyst at Trade Nation. Brian Levitt, chief global market strategist at Invesco, said tech had been in “a period of June gloom.” Reuters
The Dow’s new mix is part of the story. Alphabet Inc NASDAQ:GOOGL joined the index Monday in place of Verizon Communications Inc NYSE:VZ, and Reuters said the change raised the Dow’s exposure to digital advertising, cloud computing and AI. Alphabet rose 3.7% to $350.24 on its first day in the index and was one of the biggest Dow boosts.
Monday’s record close came after stocks rebounded from selling in tech. The Dow gained 306.63 points, or 0.59%, to 52,182.74; the S&P 500 rose 1.18%; and the Nasdaq climbed 2.07%. Peter Cardillo, chief market economist at Spartan Capital Securities, said “the market is looking forward” to earnings season. Reuters
| Fresh U.S. data | Latest | Forecast / prior |
|---|---|---|
| May job openings | 7.594 million | Reuters poll: 7.30 million |
| May hires | 5.170 million | down 45,000 |
| June consumer confidence | 91.2 | Reuters poll: 94.7 |
| Jobs “hard to get” share | 22.5% | highest since January 2021 |
The macro data did not give stock buyers a clean pass. Job openings rose by 9,000 to 7.594 million in May, beating the Reuters economist forecast of 7.30 million, but hiring fell by 45,000 to 5.170 million. Reuters said markets still expected at least one Federal Reserve rate hike this year.
The Conference Board said consumer confidence rose to 91.2 from a revised 90.6, short of the Reuters poll for 94.7. Dana Peterson, the group’s chief economist, said labor-market views “softened measurably,” with 22.5% of consumers saying jobs were hard to get. Reuters