Stocks rose higher on Monday as the market's postelection rally continued. The Dow Jones Industrial Average climbed over 300 points to close above 44,000 for the first time, while the S&P 500 added 0.1% to surpass the key 6,000 threshold. The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite, however, traded around its flatline as megacap tech names ticked lower by session end.
Here's how the market settled on Monday:
S&P 500 Index
Dow Jones Industrial Average
Nasdaq Composite Index
In Focus:
Oppenheimer Asset Management chief investment strategist John Stoltzfus wrote in a note to clients on Monday that market participants should not get lost in postelection optimism as the broader market continues to rally on President-elect Donald Trump's victory.
"In our view, investors could well benefit from practicing patience and avoiding jumping to conclusions as to how the election outcome will affect the markets," Stoltzfus wrote. "we favor broad diversification tuned more to cyclical and secular trends that remain in place for now rather than 'betting' on the shape of things to come as a direct result of the elections that just took place."
In the News:
Mattel
"Mattel was made aware of a misprint on the packaging of the Mattel Wicked collection dolls, primarily sold in the U.S., which was intended to direct consumers to the official WickedMovie.com landing page," Mattel said in a statement. "We deeply regret this unfortunate error and are taking immediate action to remedy this. Parents are advised that the misprinted, incorrect website is not appropriate for children."
Cigna Group
Chipotle Mexican Grill
"Boatwright was by far the most logical choice given his instrumental role in leading Chipotle's efforts to improve operations, integrate new technology, reduce employee turnover, and bolster customer satisfaction," said William Blair analyst Sharon Zackfia in a note on Monday.
Morgan Stanley analyst Erik Woodring raised the firm's price target on Dell Technologies
"While our 3Q24 CIO Survey showed that DELL is the best-positioned hardware vendor to capture traditional enterprise spend over the next 3 years, our recent AI server checks show that DELL's AI infrastructure momentum is building even faster," Woodring wrote. "In fact, we now estimate DELL will ship 48K 8-GPU AI server equivalents in FY26/CY25, equivalent to 23% Y?Y growth, with our new FY26 AI Server revenue forecast now standing at just over $20B, -60% higher than our prior forecast and a few billion dollars above the buyside Consensus."
For Tuesday:
Market participants will react to more Fedspeak on Tuesday, alongside earnings reports from companies including Home Depot