NEW YORK, July 6, 2026, 16:03 EDT
- Dow Jones Industrial Average closed at 53,056.80, up 156.73 points, or 0.30%, after touching 53,060.10.
- S&P 500 rose 0.72%; Nasdaq rose 1.12%, helped by chip and AI-linked stocks.
- Breadth was weaker than the index gain: S&P 500 decliners outnumbered advancers 1.3-to-1 in midday trade.
- The next test is earnings: LSEG I/B/E/S forecasts S&P 500 second-quarter earnings growth of 24%, with tech earnings up about 65%.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average (INDEXDJX:.DJI) closed above 53,000 for the first time on Monday, a record finish that looked stronger in the index than it did under the tape. The Dow ended at 53,056.80, up 156.73 points, or 0.30%, after a 52,648.69-to-53,060.10 range. The S&P 500 (INDEXSP:.INX) closed at 7,537.48, up 54.24 points, or 0.72%; the Nasdaq Composite (INDEXNASDAQ:.IXIC) rose 1.12%.
The useful number was not just 53,000. It was 408.11 points, the Dow’s rebound from its session low to the close. Earlier, the Dow had been down 251 points, and only 12 of its 30 stocks were rising, according to Dow Jones Market Data cited by MarketWatch. S&P 500 decliners outnumbered advancers by 1.3-to-1 in Reuters’ midday market update.
| Gauge | Latest confirmed move | What it says |
|---|---|---|
| Dow Jones Industrial Average | 53,056.80, +0.30% | Record close; only 3.30 points below session high |
| S&P 500 | 7,537.48, +0.72% | Market-cap index beat the Dow |
| Nasdaq Composite | +1.12% | Tech led again |
| S&P 500 breadth | Decliners ahead 1.3-to-1 at midday | Index gains were narrow |
That matters because the Dow is price-weighted, not market-cap weighted. S&P Dow Jones Indices describes it as a price-weighted measure of 30 U.S. blue-chip companies, which means a higher-priced stock can push the index more than a lower-priced company with a larger market value.
The 53,000 close was the Dow’s fifth 1,000-point marker of 2026, compared with three such markers in all of 2025, according to Dow Jones Market Data cited by MarketWatch. It came four trading days after the Dow first closed above 52,000. Since that 52,000 break, Apple NASDAQ:AAPL had added the most points to the Dow, while Caterpillar NYSE:CAT had been the biggest drag.
Broadcom NASDAQ:AVGO, not a Dow stock, still set the day’s tone. A July 6 SEC filing said Broadcom and Apple agreed to expand their technology collaboration through 2031, with Broadcom to develop and supply custom ASIC silicon products for multiple generations of Apple products. Broadcom jumped 3.8%, Apple rose more than 1%, and the Philadelphia semiconductor index added 2.6%, Reuters reported.
“This is a market that’s leaving a lot of people out,” said Jake Dollarhide, chief executive officer of Longbow Asset Management. He said that “if you’re not in semiconductors,” investors were “basically missing the entire rally.” Reuters
The Apple-Broadcom deal helped the Dow through Apple but said more about chip supply than old-line industrial demand. “For Apple, locking in Broadcom through 2031 buys supply-chain certainty,” Emarketer analyst Jacob Bourne said. Analysts cited by Reuters said Apple accounts for about 20% of Broadcom’s annual revenue. Reuters
Microsoft NASDAQ:MSFT fell 1.2% after saying it would cut about 4,800 jobs, or 2.1% of its workforce. Great Hill Capital Chairman Thomas Hayes said the market read the cuts as a negative because investors still do not see a clear return on Microsoft’s capital spending.
| Next market test | Forecast or market pricing | Dow read-through |
|---|---|---|
| S&P 500 Q2 earnings | +24% year over year, LSEG I/B/E/S | High bar for stocks after record runs |
| Tech-sector Q2 earnings | About +65%, LSEG I/B/E/S | Chip-led rally needs profit cover |
| Fed July 29 decision | 25% chance of a 25-bp rate hike, CME FedWatch via Reuters | Higher-rate risk still caps cyclicals |
| ISM services | June PMI 54.0, matched expectations | Growth held; price pressure stayed in view |
The macro backdrop was mixed enough to matter. The ISM non-manufacturing PMI edged down to 54.0 in June, Reuters reported, while the prices-paid index fell to 67.7 from 71.3 after oil eased from war-driven highs. A reading above 50 still points to expansion, but the slip reduced the cushion for stocks outside the chip trade.
Last week’s soft jobs report stayed in the price. The U.S. economy added 57,000 jobs in June, below a 110,000 estimate, and the Dow rose 1.14% on July 2 to what was then a record close. “It just takes the pressure off the Fed,” said Adam Sarhan, chief executive at 50 Park Investments. Reuters
Fed minutes are due Wednesday, the first under Chair Kevin Warsh. Steve Englander, global head of G10 FX research and North American macro strategy at Standard Chartered Bank, wrote that he expects Warsh to make the minutes “less informative with respect to the views expressed.” Delta Air Lines NYSE:DAL and PepsiCo NASDAQ:PEP are set to report later this week. Reuters