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Dow Surges 500 Points as Investors Rotate Out of Tech and Into Value Plays

Economy
0 min read

The Dow Jones Industrial Average rallied more than 500 points on Tuesday as investors shifted money away from high-flying technology stocks and toward value-oriented sectors, extending a broader trend of portfolio rotation that’s been building for weeks.

The 30-stock blue-chip index climbed 542 points, or roughly 1.2%, driven by gains in healthcare and industrial names such as Merck, Amgen, and Johnson & Johnson. The S&P 500 edged higher by 0.3%, while the Nasdaq Composite slipped 0.2% as pressure continued to mount on the technology sector.

The day’s market action reflected an ongoing tug-of-war between growth and value equities. While tech stocks have dominated 2025’s rally, recent concerns about stretched valuations have led investors to lock in profits and reallocate capital toward sectors considered more resilient in a high-rate, slower-growth environment.

The AI sector was among the hardest hit. Cloud infrastructure provider CoreWeave sank 16% after issuing disappointing guidance, sparking a broader selloff in artificial intelligence names. Nvidia dropped 2% following reports that SoftBank exited its multibillion-dollar position in the chipmaker, while Micron, Oracle, and Palantir also traded lower. The Technology Select Sector SPDR Fund (XLK) finished the session down about 1%.

Meanwhile, value-oriented sectors like healthcare, energy, and consumer staples gained traction as investors sought stability amid lingering economic uncertainty. Analysts noted that companies with strong balance sheets, consistent earnings, and solid dividends are becoming increasingly attractive as the market recalibrates after an AI-driven surge earlier this year.

The broader sentiment was also supported by optimism that the record-setting U.S. government shutdown may soon end. The Senate passed a bill Monday evening to reopen the government, with the measure now awaiting approval in the House. The latest version of the bill excludes an extension of Affordable Care Act subsidies but includes provisions for a vote on the issue in December.

While the political gridlock has weighed on sentiment in recent weeks, hopes for resolution boosted cyclical sectors that tend to benefit from improved government spending and consumer confidence.

Still, not all economic data aligned with the upbeat tone in equities. A new ADP report showed a slowdown in private-sector job creation for the four weeks ending October 25, falling by more than 11,000 per week on average. Combined with muted hiring trends and rising layoff announcements, the data suggest a softer labor market heading into year-end.

Even so, investors appear willing to look past the near-term softness in economic indicators in favor of more stable growth plays. The move away from richly valued technology stocks toward defensive and dividend-paying equities signals that Wall Street may be entering a new phase of this market cycle—one less driven by momentum and more by fundamentals.

At the close of trading, the Dow stood at its highest level in over two months, marking a strong rebound from October’s volatility. As traders continue to rotate portfolios, the key question heading into the final weeks of 2025 is whether this shift toward value and quality will persist—or if tech’s dominance will once again reassert itself.

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