Nasdaq Rally Hits Speed Bump as Tech Stocks Wobble – Fed Warning and AI Jitters Shake Markets (Sept 24–25, 2025)

Dow Jones Today, Nov. 6, 2025: Tech Sell‑Off, FAA Flight Cuts and Tariff Uncertainty Drag Stocks Lower

Updated: November 6, 2025

Key takeaways

  • The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 0.84% to 46,912.30, the S&P 500 slid 1.12% to 6,720.32, and the Nasdaq Composite dropped 1.90% to 23,053.99 at the close. [1]
  • Losses were led by a renewed tech sell‑off and valuation anxiety—even after a few standout earnings beats—while airlines slumped on a sweeping FAA order to cut flights by 10% at 40 major U.S. airports amid the record‑long federal shutdown. [2]
  • The Supreme Court’s scrutiny of President Trump’s tariff authority kept trade policy in focus and added to market uncertainty. [3]
  • Layoffs surged in October to 153,074 (highest October since 2003), and a Chicago Fed estimate put the unemployment rate at 4.4%—data workarounds investors are leaning on while official releases are delayed by the shutdown. [4]

Market recap: All three indexes retreat

U.S. equities finished broadly lower Thursday with the Dow off 398.70 points (‑0.84%), the S&P 500 down 75.97 points (‑1.12%) and the Nasdaq lower by 445.80 points (‑1.90%). Tech remained the primary drag, snapping the market’s recent winning streak. [5]

Valuation worries across mega‑cap tech overshadowed a handful of strong single‑stock stories, while the government shutdown and policy uncertainties kept risk appetite on a short leash. [6]


What moved the market today

1) Tech‑led risk‑off

A renewed wobble in technology and AI‑linked shares weighed on the tape. Investors continued to debate lofty multiples after weeks of outperformance, even as Datadog (DDOG) ripped higher on results and guidance. [7]

  • Datadog topped the S&P 500 after raising its outlook; shares jumped ~22% intraday on AI‑driven demand for cloud security and observability. [8]

2) Shutdown shock reaches the runways

With the federal government shutdown now the longest in U.S. history, the FAA said it will detail a 10% flight‑reduction plan at 40 of the busiest airports—citing safety and staffing strains—further denting sentiment and pressuring airlines. [9]

3) Tariff showdown at the Supreme Court

The U.S. Supreme Court signaled skepticism over the legality of the administration’s sweeping tariffs under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA)—a case with major implications for trade policy and corporate margins. Markets hate uncertainty, and a ruling that forces re‑writes of tariff regimes could ripple through earnings and supply chains. [10]

4) Labor‑market signals without official data

With the Labor Department’s marquee reports delayed, investors leaned on private and regional‑Fed proxies. The Chicago Fed estimated October unemployment at 4.36% (rounded to 4.4%), the highest in four years, and Challenger, Gray & Christmas tallied 153,074 announced October job cuts (up 175% y/y; >1.1 million YTD) — a combination that points to cooling momentum. [11]


Inside the Dow: biggest drags vs. bright spots

  • Laggards: Price‑weighted mechanics amplified drops in Salesforce (CRM) and Nvidia (NVDA)—together subtracting well over 100 points from the Dow—while Visa (V) and select consumer names added to the pressure. [12]
  • Gainers:IBM (IBM) and Merck (MRK) bucked the sell‑off, with IBM closing up ~1.8% and Merck up ~1.7%, offering defensive ballast inside the 30‑stock average. [13]

Context: Nvidia joined the Dow last year, replacing Intel, and Sherwin‑Williams replaced Dow Inc.—changes that increased the index’s sensitivity to large‑ticket tech and materials names. [14]


Rates, dollar and commodities

Bond buyers stepped in as growth jitters rose: the 10‑year Treasury yield slipped to around 4.09%, while the U.S. dollar eased against major peers. WTI crude and Brent settled fractionally lower. [15]


The Fed: mixed signals in a data fog

Policymakers sent divergent messages. Governor Stephen Miran said he expects a rate cut in December, while Cleveland Fed President Beth Hammack warned policy may be too close to “neutral” given stubborn inflation. Chicago Fed’s Austan Goolsbee likened decision‑making amid missing government data to “driving in the fog,” arguing for caution. [16]


Week‑to‑date and year‑to‑date

The sell‑off knocked the major indexes into weekly losses (S&P and Nasdaq leading), but the market remains up solidly YTD—with the Dow still positive double‑digits for 2025 even after today’s pullback. [17]


What to watch next

  • FAA implementation details for the 10% flight‑cut plan—timeline, airport list and duration—are due Friday, with direct read‑throughs for airlines, travel and airports. [18]
  • Tariff case developments: any additional indications from justices or the administration could swing trade‑sensitive groups. [19]
  • Labor data substitutes: With official employment and inflation prints delayed, markets will keep parsing private trackers and Fed estimates for direction. [20]

Bottom line

A tech‑heavy risk‑off tone, deepening shutdown effects (now touching air travel), and an unusually high‑stakes tariff case combined to sap risk appetite and tug the Dow lower on November 6, 2025. Until policy clarity returns—and with data still patchy—volatility stays the base case even as underlying earnings remain mixed across sectors. [21]


Sources: Reuters market wrap and policy coverage; Associated Press market close; Challenger, Gray & Christmas job‑cut report; Chicago Fed unemployment estimate; MarketWatch component movers; FAA/shutdown reporting. [22]

Stock Futures Bounce Back After Tech Sell-Off #StockMarket #TechSellOff #Investing #CNBC #investment

References

1. www.reuters.com, 2. www.reuters.com, 3. www.reuters.com, 4. www.challengergray.com, 5. www.reuters.com, 6. www.reuters.com, 7. www.reuters.com, 8. www.reuters.com, 9. www.reuters.com, 10. www.reuters.com, 11. www.reuters.com, 12. www.marketwatch.com, 13. www.marketwatch.com, 14. www.reuters.com, 15. www.reuters.com, 16. www.reuters.com, 17. apnews.com, 18. www.reuters.com, 19. www.reuters.com, 20. www.reuters.com, 21. www.reuters.com, 22. www.reuters.com

Stock Market Today

  • CRH Valuation Check After 2% Dip
    November 6, 2025, 7:50 PM EST. CRH's stock has fallen roughly 2% over the past month but is up more than 25% this year, with a 3-year total shareholder return above 260%. The market narrative labels CRH as undervalued, with a fair value around $133.27. The bull case hinges on the U.S. infrastructure funding rollout and a constructive highway bill outlook, promising sustained revenue growth and backlog visibility. Still, risks include dependence on public funding shifts and the challenges of integrating acquisitions. On valuation, CRH trades at 23.7x earnings, above the sector average 15.1x, but near peers at 26.8x and a fair multiple around 26.2x. The question remains whether current prices fully reflect growth potential or if further upside awaits.
  • Cocoa Prices Sink as West African Prospects Improve; Ivory Coast Harvest Underway
    November 6, 2025, 7:48 PM EST. December ICE NY cocoa (CCZ25) and ICE London cocoa (#7, CAZ25) closed lower for a second day as expectations of a bumper West Africa crop weigh on prices. Ivory Coast farmers report healthy trees and drier beans, while Ghanaian pod development accelerates on favorable weather. Mondelez cited cocoa pod counts about 7% above the five-year average and higher than last year, supporting optimism about quality. The market has also priced in the Bloomberg Commodity Index inclusion for cocoa starting January, potentially drawing inflows. Ivory Coast export data showed shipments down about 16% from a year ago, helping shrink ICE cocoa inventories to a 7.25-month low in U.S. ports. Demand softness, including weak North American chocolate sales and sluggish Q3 grindings in Asia/Europe, remains a price headwind.
  • Sugar Prices Rebound as Real Strength Triggers Short Covering
    November 6, 2025, 7:46 PM EST. Sugar prices rebounded after early losses as a stronger Brazilian real sparked short covering in futures. March NY #11 SBH26 rose about +0.85%, while London's ICE white sugar #5 SWZ25 gained +0.36%. The real's strength discouraged Brazil's export sales and helped lift the market from a wave of macro-softness that left NY sugar near multi-year lows. Supportive factors include upgraded Brazil Center-South production forecasts (Datagro near 44 MMT for 2026/27) and Conab's 45 MMT 2025/26 estimate. India's ISMA raised 2025/26 production to 31 MMT, yet trimmed ethanol-use, potentially boosting exports. If a global sugar surplus persists, price rallies may be limited, even as supply signals from Brazil and India remain important cushions for bulls.
  • Worst October layoffs in 22 years drag stocks lower as investors reassess the labor market
    November 6, 2025, 7:44 PM EST. October's layoffs data showed the worst reading in 22 years, fanning selling pressure across major indices. The sobering print revived bearish sentiment for stocks, with tech and growth names leading the decline as traders priced in weaker demand and ongoing labor market softness. Investors weighed the implications for Fed policy, inflation trajectories, and the pace of rate cuts, sending risk assets lower and boosting volatility. Some defensive sectors found marginal support, but the broader risk-off tone underscored how central labor data remains a key driver for near-term equities expectations and the direction of rates.
  • Markets slide as Tesla pay vote looms; AI-driven tech stocks weigh on indexes
    November 6, 2025, 7:42 PM EST. The U.S. stock market pulled back Thursday as major indexes slipped: the S&P 500 down about 1%, the Dow off 1%, and the Nasdaq 1.6% lower. Traders awaited fresh earnings and watched AI-name valuations, with Nvidia, Microsoft, and Amazon among notable decliners. Attention centered on the Tesla shareholder meeting at 4 p.m. ET and the proposed trillion-dollar pay package for CEO Elon Musk, fueling concerns about leadership incentives if the plan is rejected. The broader market has traded near record highs this week, raising questions about overvaluation in the tech sector. Treasuries moved modestly higher, with the 10-year yield easing to around 4.09% and the two-year at roughly 3.56%, as investors weighed earnings against the ongoing U.S. government shutdown.
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