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S&P 500 closes higher; chipmakers, small caps and other stocks jump

The S&P 500 ended higher on Monday. Gains in chipmakers, and companies that are related to artificial-intelligence, as well as smaller?companies, were largely responsible for the increase.

Russell 2000 index has jumped. The small-cap index is outperforming the S&P 500, Nasdaq and S&P 500 so far in 2026.

Alphabet, Amazon and other companies have all risen ahead of their quarterly results this week. This will provide investors with a new glimpse into the race for AI dominance.

After the bell, AI-related data company Palantir rose ahead of its quarterly reports.

SanDisk Advanced Micro Devices Micron Technology and other chipmakers that benefit from AI-related demand also saw a rise in their stock prices.

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

The S&P 500 will be up 2% by 2026, lagging behind the Russell 2000 which is expected to rise more than 6%.

Gains in small cap stocks are often viewed by investors as a sign of economic confidence.

The fundamentals are strong and earnings are high. "We have had positive surprises for both revenues and earnings, almost across the board," Tim Ghriskey said, senior portfolio analyst at Ingalls & Snyder, New York.

According to LSEG, analysts expect 'S&P 500 companies' to have increased their earnings by nearly 11% during the December quarter. This is up from an estimated 9% growth at the beginning of January.

Most of this growth is driven by technology-related companies.

Walt Disney's shares fell, despite its quarterly earnings exceeding Wall Street expectations. The company warned that international visitors were declining to its U.S. parks and earnings in its TV and Film division had fallen.

The preliminary data shows that the S&P 500 rose?37.25, or 0.54 percent, to 6,976.28. Meanwhile, the Nasdaq Composite rose 129.69, or 0.55 percent, to 23,591.51. The Dow Jones Industrial Average grew by 519.80, or 1.06% to 49,412.27.

The PMI data revealed that U.S. factory activity grew in January for the first time since a year.

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 day.

Oil prices dropped, and the S&P 500 Energy Sector Index fell. Donald Trump, the U.S. president, said that Iran is "seriously speaking" with Washington. This comment hints at a de-escalation of tensions and eases fears about supply disruptions.

Low energy prices have boosted airline stocks. United Airlines, JetBlue, Delta Air Lines, and Southwest Airlines all rose.

The House of Representatives has taken up legislation to end a partial shutdown that was entered on Saturday. A final vote is expected on Tuesday.

Due to the partial government shutdown, the Bureau of Labor Statistics announced that the highly anticipated employment report for January will not be released this Friday.

(source: Reuters)