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Small caps surge as S&P 500 reaches record highs

S&P 500 reached a record high on Monday. Gains by chipmakers and companies involved in artificial intelligence were largely responsible for this, but smaller companies rose as well.

The Russell 2000 index rose 1.6%. Small-cap indexes have outperformed the S&P 500, Nasdaq and S&P 500 so far in 2026.

Alphabet, Amazon and Microsoft each gained more than 1% in advance of their quarterly results due later this week. These reports will provide investors with a new look at the race for AI dominance.

Palantir, a company that deals with AI-related data, rose 1.6% after the bell to its quarterly report.

The chipmakers that benefit from the AI-related demand of their components have also seen a rise. SanDisk soared 15% while Advanced Micro Devices, Micron Technology and Micron Technology all added around 5%.

The S&P 500 gained for the first time in three sessions, following recent concerns about high valuations of tech companies whose stocks have soared on optimism over?AI.

The S&P 500 will be up about 2% by 2026. This is less than the Russell 2000, which has risen nearly 7%.

Gains in small-cap stock are often viewed by investors as a reflection of confidence in the economy.

The fundamentals are good, and earnings are strong. "We have had positive surprises for both revenues and earnings in New York," said Tim Ghriskey.

According to LSEG, analysts expect S&P companies to have increased their earnings by nearly 11% during the December quarter. This is up from a?estimate at the beginning of January of around 9%. The majority of this growth is driven by technology-related companies.

Walt Disney dropped 5.3% Monday after it

Postings

The company reported quarterly earnings that were above Wall Street's expectations, but warned about a drop in international visitors at its U.S. parks and a slump of earnings in its TV and Film division.

The S&P was up by 0.70% to 6,987.77, setting the stage for a new record close.

The Nasdaq rose 0.91%, to 23,674.32 point. The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 1.04% to 49,403.02 point.

The PMI data revealed that U.S. manufacturing activity increased for the first time since a year ago in January.

The CBOE VIX (also known as Wall Street's fear gauge) dropped 1.3 points, to 16.2, after hitting a high of nearly two weeks earlier in the session.

Oil prices dropped and the S&P 500 Energy Sector Index fell 1.4%. U.S. president Donald Trump said Iran is "seriously speaking" with Washington. This comment hinted at a de-escalation, and eased concerns about supply disruptions.

Low energy prices have boosted airline shares. United Airlines, JetBlue, Delta Air Lines, and Southwest each rose between 4% to 7%.

House of Representatives has taken up legislation to end a partial shutdown of the government entered on Saturday. A final vote is expected on Tuesday. The Bureau of Labor Statistics announced that the "closely-watched employment report" for January will not be released this Friday because of the partial government shutdown.

The S&P 500 has a ratio of 1.3 to one between the number of rising and falling issues.

The S&P 500 recorded 28 new highs, and 8 new lowers. The Nasdaq registered 139 highs, and 186 lows.

(source: Reuters)