The Dow Jones Industrial Average breached 52,000 for the first time, powered by Alphabet's debut and a tech rebound that lifted the Nasdaq 2.1%.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average breached 52,000 for the first time, powered by Alphabet's debut and a tech rebound that lifted the Nasdaq 2.1%.

The Dow rose 307 points, or 0.6%, to a record 52,182.74, crossing 52,000 for the first time as tech shares rebounded from their worst week in months.
"When you get through psychological high water marks like a new high in the Dow or the S&P, people who have cash on the sidelines start to feel some FOMO," said Richard Steinberg, senior global market strategist at Focus Partners Wealth.
The S&P 500 climbed 1.2% and the Nasdaq Composite surged 2.1%, with both benchmarks snapping five-session losing streaks. The Russell 2000 index of smaller companies also hit a new record, rising 0.1%. The 10-year Treasury yield rose to 4.375%, ending a four-day decline, as investors weighed a Supreme Court ruling that rejected President Donald Trump's bid to fire Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook through an expedited process.
The milestone marks the Dow's fourth 1,000-point gain in 2026, coming just 18 trading sessions after it closed above 51,000. The pace reflects a broadening rally that has drawn in sectors beyond technology, though some strategists cautioned that concentration risk in a handful of chip giants remains a concern.
Alphabet rose 4.8% on its first day as a Dow component, leading the 30-stock index. The Google parent's addition gives the price-weighted index a direct link to one of the world's most valuable companies. Fellow mega-cap tech names also advanced: Amazon gained 3.2%, Meta rose 2.2% and Nvidia added 1.3%. Microsoft slipped 1.2% and Apple edged down 0.7%.
Tesla surged 8.5%, while SpaceX — a private company jointly developing a chip fabrication complex in Texas with Tesla — rose more than 7%. At least one analyst has predicted the two Elon Musk-led companies will eventually combine.
Geopolitical Truce Lifts Cyclical Stocks
The rally drew additional support from easing geopolitical tensions. The U.S. and Iran reached an agreement over the weekend to halt hostilities and reopen the Strait of Hormuz to commercial shipping after a series of military strikes. Brent crude rose 1.6% to $73.15 a barrel, while West Texas Intermediate advanced to $71, as traders assessed whether the truce would hold. The decline in oil prices in recent weeks had helped ease inflation fears and supported a rotation into cyclical stocks including Caterpillar and Johnson & Johnson, both of which gained Monday.
Fed Independence Test Passes
Bond markets showed little reaction to the Supreme Court's rejection of Trump's bid to remove Fed Governor Lisa Cook, a case investors had watched closely as a test of the central bank's autonomy. Treasury yields held largely steady, an outcome traders had anticipated.
"My sense is that the risk appetite to buy tech dragged everything up with it," said Joseph Brusuelas, chief economist at RSM.
Significant risks remain. The potential for renewed fighting in the Middle East persists, and questions about whether the artificial intelligence build-out will generate returns sufficient to justify massive capital expenditures continue to hang over the tech sector.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.