Dow Rises Another 500 Points to Record High; Tech Stocks Stall at Highs, Wall Street Giants Collectively Cheer Undervalued Traditional Industries
On June 15, U.S. stock indices diverged: the Dow hit a record high, while the Nasdaq and S&P 500 declined due to heavy selling in AI and semiconductor shares. Market activity signals a rotation from high-growth tech toward cyclical sectors, including consumer discretionary and financials. Analysts attribute this shift to easing geopolitical tensions, particularly a U.S.-Iran ceasefire, which has improved the crude supply outlook and lowered oil prices. These macroeconomic tailwinds, combined with expectations for central bank rate cuts, are fostering a broader market rally and renewing interest in previously underowned, economically sensitive sectors.

TradingKey - On June 15, the three major U.S. stock indexes diverged once again, as the Nasdaq Composite and the S&P 500 reversed earlier gains to close lower, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average climbed for a fourth consecutive day to hit another record high. Technology stocks led the declines, while consumer and financial shares bucked the trend to post gains.
As of press time, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was up 0.98% at 52,176.71; the Nasdaq Composite was down 0.42% at 26,572.11; and the S&P 500 was down 0.12% at 7,545.24.

[Source: FutuBull]
Among megacap tech stocks, SpaceX (SPCX) surged 10.21%, Alphabet Class A (GOOGL) rose 0.64%, Apple (AAPL) gained 0.63%, Amazon (AMZN) advanced 0.59%, and Meta Platforms (META) edged up 0.30%. On the downside, Intel (INTC) slid 5.92%, Broadcom (AVGO) fell 3.45%, Netflix (NFLX) dropped 3.29%, Microsoft (MSFT) slipped 1.71%, Nvidia (NVDA) declined 1.40%, and Tesla (TSLA) lost 1.00%.
At the sector level, core artificial intelligence plays—including chipmakers, optical communications, and AI software stocks—led the declines, while traditional sectors like consumer discretionary and financials bucked the trend to rally.
The Philadelphia Semiconductor Index slumped over 3%, with 28 of its 30 constituents in the red. Intel (INTC) fell 5.94%, Marvell Technology (MRVL) dropped 4.56%, AMD (AMD) slid 4.25%, KLA (KLAC) declined 3.98%, Broadcom (AVGO) fell 3.82%, and Micron Technology (MU) shed 3.32%.
A recent report from Morgan Stanley explained this phenomenon, suggesting that the U.S. stock rally is rotating from technology into cyclical sectors. Economically sensitive sectors, which had lagged due to geopolitical conflicts, are poised to drive the market's next phase.
The firm noted that the resumption of navigation through the Strait of Hormuz, coupled with easing pressures from interest rates, oil prices, and the U.S. dollar, bodes well for value sectors. It expressed optimism about consumer discretionary, transportation, and regional banks, noting that these sectors remain underowned.
JPMorgan Chase analyzed the situation from the perspective of falling oil prices, stating that the implementation of a U.S.-Iran ceasefire agreement has significantly improved the global crude supply outlook. A downward shift in baseline oil prices is expected to kickstart the rotation in market styles that was previously disrupted by geopolitical conflicts, providing a clear tailwind for equities.
Expectations of lower oil prices have rapidly fed through to financial markets, prompting a simultaneous rally in stocks and bonds, while market expectations for rate cuts by major central banks continue to build. The cross-sector and cross-regional market rotation, which was disrupted by the tensions in Iran, is now gradually resuming.
This content was translated using AI and reviewed for clarity. It is for informational purposes only.
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