Big Tech snapped back to start the week as hopes for a Washington deal brightened the outlook and volatility eased. Here’s what moved markets today—Monday, November 10, 2025.
- Indexes jumped early Monday: By late morning, the S&P 500 was up about 1.2%, the Nasdaq rose roughly 1.9%, and the Dow added ~180–280 points as tech outperformed. The VIX drifted lower from last week’s spike. [1]
- Nvidia (NVDA) led the rally, with Alphabet and Amazon also climbing; Palantir was among the session’s biggest gainers. [2]
- Shutdown progress boosted sentiment after the Senate advanced a funding measure that could reopen the federal government and restart delayed data releases, though final passage was still pending. [3]
- Caution remains: Market strategists warned that the tech surge may prove fleeting if policy or macro headlines disappoint. [4]
What’s driving the move
1) Washington tailwinds: Senate procedural win
Markets reacted to signs of progress toward ending the 40‑day government shutdown, the longest on record, after senators advanced a House‑passed bill that would fund the government into late January. Traders welcomed the possibility that official economic data could resume, helping the Federal Reserve and investors regain a clearer read on growth and inflation. [5]
2) AI and megacaps reassert leadership
Nvidia rallied around 3%–4% intraday, while Alphabet and Amazon gained about 3%. The rebound followed last week’s tech wobble and underscored how AI‑exposed megacaps continue to set the market’s tone. [6]
A separate catalyst for sentiment: UBS set a 2026 S&P 500 target of 7,500, citing AI‑driven capex and resilient earnings—an outlook that supports ongoing interest in the theme even as investors debate valuations. [7]
3) Futures setup and weekend developments
U.S. stock futures edged higher into Monday on optimism that a shutdown resolution was nearing—momentum that carried into the cash session as headlines trickled in from Capitol Hill. [8]
Market snapshot (late morning ET)
- S&P 500: ~+1.2%
- Nasdaq Composite: ~+1.9%
- Dow Jones Industrial Average: roughly +0.4% to +0.6%
- CBOE VIX: lower on the day from Friday’s three‑week high
These are intraday readings; check closing data for final levels. [9]
Sectors & notable movers
- Semiconductors: Nvidia paced gains; TSMC’s U.S.‑traded shares rose after the chipmaker reported ~17% y/y revenue growth in October, reinforcing the sector’s demand narrative. [10]
- Software/AI: Palantir jumped, topping the S&P 500’s leaderboard intraday. [11]
- Health insurers: Humana, Cigna and peers slipped amid uncertainty over healthcare tax credits in the evolving funding compromise. [12]
- Airlines: United and Delta gained as a potential government reopening could ease air‑traffic disruptions tied to staffing shortages. [13]
- M&A/biopharma: Metsera fell after Pfizer prevailed in a bidding contest valued up to $10 billion. [14]
The strategist view
On Fox Business, Kenny Polcari cautioned that the tech‑led pop could be short‑lived if policy progress stalls or if investors reassess stretched expectations—an argument for measured positioning even as AI enthusiasm persists. [15]
Why it matters
- Breadth vs. leadership: Monday’s bounce was narrow, with a handful of giants doing most of the lifting while many stocks lagged. That concentration risk remains a key theme into year‑end. [16]
- Data gap risk: The shutdown’s delay of official reports has forced traders to lean on company earnings and private data. A quick reopening would restore the flow of government indicators that guide Fed expectations and market pricing. [17]
- AI narrative: Even after last week’s wobble, AI‑related capital spending and earnings momentum continue to anchor the bullish case for tech and the broader market. The UBS target underscores that medium‑term optimism. [18]
What’s next to watch
- Congressional votes and White House action on the funding bill—any setbacks could re‑ignite volatility. [19]
- Earnings season wrap‑up and company guidance as investors seek confirmation that profit growth can justify 2025’s multiple expansion. [20]
- Labor and inflation data timing—should the government reopen in time to collect and publish late‑November/early‑December releases. [21]
Sources: AP recap of Monday’s rally and sector moves; MarketWatch/Dow Jones on futures and Washington progress; Reuters on shutdown mechanics, intraday index/sector moves, and UBS’s 2026 S&P 500 target.
References
1. apnews.com, 2. www.reuters.com, 3. www.reuters.com, 4. www.foxbusiness.com, 5. www.reuters.com, 6. www.reuters.com, 7. www.reuters.com, 8. www.marketwatch.com, 9. apnews.com, 10. apnews.com, 11. apnews.com, 12. apnews.com, 13. www.reuters.com, 14. www.reuters.com, 15. www.foxbusiness.com, 16. apnews.com, 17. www.reuters.com, 18. www.reuters.com, 19. www.reuters.com, 20. www.reuters.com, 21. www.reuters.com


