NYSE Skyrockets to Record Highs as AI Frenzy, Fed Rate Cut Bets Fuel Stock Surge

Why Stocks Are Down Today (Nov. 6, 2025): Tech Sell‑Off, Shutdown Data Void, and Tariff Uncertainty Hit Wall Street

Key takeaways

  • Big Tech-led slump: Renewed valuation jitters in AI and semiconductors dragged the S&P 500 and Nasdaq lower, with Qualcomm weakness and a broad chip pullback weighing on sentiment. [1]
  • Data blackout from the federal shutdown: With the longest U.S. government shutdown on record now past day 35, investors lack the usual government economic releases, amplifying fear and volatility. [2]
  • Mixed private indicators: ADP showed just +42,000 private jobs in October, while Challenger announced 153,074 layoffs—the worst October since 2003—sending a muddled macro signal. [3]
  • Tariff/legal uncertainty: A high‑stakes Supreme Court review of broad U.S. tariffs and headline risks around future trade actions added another risk premium to equities. [4]
  • Rates and commodities: The 10‑year Treasury yield slipped near ~4.09% as growth concerns rose; oil hovered around two‑week lows, pressuring energy shares. [5]

What the market is doing right now

Stocks were broadly lower midday Thursday (around 12:30 p.m. ET): the Dow was off by roughly 0.9% (~‑400 to ‑500 points), the S&P 500 down a little over 1%, and the Nasdaq nearly ‑2% as megacaps and chipmakers led declines. A live markets snapshot showed the S&P 500 near 6,710 (‑1.3%), Dow near 46,850 (‑1.0%), and Nasdaq near 23,022 (‑2.0%). [6]

The “why” behind today’s sell‑off

1) Tech and AI valuation hangover

Wall Street’s leadership group—mega‑cap tech and AI‑exposed names—came under renewed pressure after a brief respite Wednesday. Semiconductor shares fell and software names were mixed; Qualcomm slipped after signaling it could lose share at Samsung next year even as guidance topped estimates, a reminder that lofty AI narratives still face earnings execution risk. Investors also remain on edge after recent warnings from bank chiefs about a possible pullback in richly valued tech. [7]

Stock movers to know:

  • DoorDash (DASH) dropped around 15–16% after a profit miss and plans for heavier 2026 investment, hitting the consumer discretionary sector. [8]
  • Datadog (DDOG) surged on raised profit and revenue forecasts, bucking the broader tech downtrend. [9]
  • Tesla (TSLA) traded lower ahead of a high‑profile shareholder vote, adding to the megacap drag. [10]

2) A record‑long U.S. government shutdown is starving markets of data

The federal shutdown—now the longest in U.S. history—has delayed core releases like nonfarm payrolls and CPI. That data void complicates pricing for everything from rate‑cut odds to earnings resilience, encouraging traders to de‑risk until clarity returns. News of the FAA preparing to cut flights by up to 10% at 40 major airports because of controller staffing during the shutdown further dented sentiment (and airline shares). [11]

3) Conflicting private‑sector readings on the economy

With official statistics missing, markets are leaning on private data—and it’s sending mixed signals.

  • ADP: private payrolls +42,000 in October—tepid hiring momentum. [12]
  • Challenger, Gray & Christmas: 153,074 announced layoffs in October, highest for the month since 2003, and >1 million cuts year‑to‑date. [13]
  • ISM Services: activity expanded in October (PMI 52.4), but the employment subindex remained below 50, flagging a soft labor backdrop. [14]

That push‑pull narrative—expanding services but weak hiring and rising layoffs—is fueling caution in cyclicals and higher‑beta growth. [15]

4) Tariff and trade uncertainty moves to center stage

Markets also face policy risk as the U.S. Supreme Court scrutinizes the legality of sweeping tariffs—an overhang for corporate margins, supply chains, and inflation. The legal cloud over trade policy—and whether recent and proposed tariffs will stand—keeps a lid on risk appetite. [16]

5) Rates, the dollar, and oil are flashing “growth worries”

The 10‑year Treasury yield drifted to about 4.09% as investors sought safety—more consistent with growth fears than with an inflation spike. Rate‑cut odds for December have see‑sawed in recent days as traders game out Fed responses sans official data. Meanwhile, oil lingered around two‑week lows after inventory builds and demand worries, weighing on energy shares at the margin. [17]


Sector snapshot

  • Technology & Semis: Leading the decline on valuation reset and mixed earnings signals. [18]
  • Consumer Discretionary: Pressured by DoorDash’s post‑earnings slide and ongoing macro uncertainty. [19]
  • Airlines/Travel: Under pressure after the FAA’s planned capacity reductions linked to the shutdown. [20]
  • Energy: Softer as crude trades near recent lows on supply‑glut concerns. [21]

The bigger picture

Today’s sell‑off is less about a single headline and more about a stack of uncertainties arriving at once: rich tech valuations meeting mixed private data; a historic shutdown blocking the normal economic scorecard; and tariff policy in legal limbo. In that environment, investors are defaulting to risk management, bidding up safer assets (Treasuries, gold) and trimming exposure to the most extended corners of the market. [22]


What smart money is watching next

  • Policy & legal headlines: Any resolution—or escalation—on tariffs and the shutdown could quickly shift risk sentiment. [23]
  • Private data cadence: ADP, ISM, and corporate guidance will continue to stand in for BLS/BEA releases until the government reopens. [24]
  • Fed signaling: With odds for a December move fluctuating, remarks from Fed officials and market‑based probabilities remain pivotal. [25]

By the numbers (midday, Nov. 6, 2025):

  • S&P 500: ~6,710 (‑1.3%)
  • Dow: ~46,850 (‑1.0%)
  • Nasdaq: ~23,022 (‑2.0%)
  • U.S. 10‑Year Yield: ~4.09%
  • Brent crude: hovering in the low‑$60s, near two‑week lows
    Sources: Reuters live U.S. markets dashboard; Reuters energy wrap. [26]

Sources & further reading (selected):

  • Tech‑led selloff, midday market internals and movers. [27]
  • Federal shutdown: longest on record; impact on data and air travel. [28]
  • Private data: ADP October (+42k), ISM Services (52.4), Challenger layoffs (153,074; worst October since 2003). [29]
  • Tariff/legal risk: Supreme Court review of broad tariffs. [30]
  • Rates/commodities context: 10‑year near 4.09%; oil near two‑week lows. [31]

All market levels are indicative and based on publicly available intraday data as of early afternoon U.S. Eastern Time on Thursday, November 6, 2025.

US tech sell-off set to continue, China says it will remove tariffs on some US farm products

References

1. www.reuters.com, 2. www.reuters.com, 3. adpemploymentreport.com, 4. www.reuters.com, 5. www.reuters.com, 6. apnews.com, 7. www.reuters.com, 8. www.reuters.com, 9. www.reuters.com, 10. www.reuters.com, 11. www.reuters.com, 12. adpemploymentreport.com, 13. www.challengergray.com, 14. www.ismworld.org, 15. www.reuters.com, 16. www.reuters.com, 17. www.reuters.com, 18. www.reuters.com, 19. www.reuters.com, 20. www.reuters.com, 21. www.reuters.com, 22. apnews.com, 23. www.reuters.com, 24. adpemploymentreport.com, 25. www.reuters.com, 26. www.reuters.com, 27. www.reuters.com, 28. www.reuters.com, 29. adpemploymentreport.com, 30. www.reuters.com, 31. www.reuters.com

Stock Market Today

  • 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.
  • Lilly & Novo slash GLP-1 prices; FAA cuts flights hit airline stocks
    November 6, 2025, 7:40 PM EST. US equities slipped as October posted the most layoffs since 2003, with more than 150,000 jobs cut. In health care, Eli Lilly and Novo Nordisk struck a deal to slash GLP-1 prices, securing agreements tied to tariff relief and broader Medicare access under the Trump administration. In the travel space, airline stocks fell after the FAA ordered a 10% reduction in flights at 40 major airports during the government shutdown, with Delta, American, and United signaling compliance. On the earnings front, Ralph Lauren shares were lifting after a quarter that beat estimates and lifted full-year guidance, with shares up as much as 6% earlier. That's your Market Minute.
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