How Did Indexes and Sectors Respond to the Fed Cut?
Equity indexes showed uneven momentum. The S&P 500 remains less than 1% below its Oct. 28 record close, a level that has acted as a psychological reference point since the prior meeting. The Dow firmed, supported by cyclicals, while the Nasdaq lagged as investors trimmed exposure to mega-cap software and communications names.
Sector performance reflected a rotation into defensives and industrials. Industrials rose 1.16%, health care added 0.97%, and consumer discretionary gained 0.77%. Technology fell 0.54%, communication services slipped 0.43%, and consumer staples edged down 0.21%. Financials, energy, materials, and real estate posted modest gains.
Which Stocks Led the Market’s Move?
Top gainers included GE Vernova, up 15.255%; LKQ, up 5.289%; Warner Bros Discovery, up 5.069%; and Omnicom, up 5.066%. Strength also appeared in travel, freight, and industrial names such as Royal Caribbean and Old Dominion Freight Line.
On the downside, Uber dropped 6.512%, DoorDash fell 4.635%, and HCA slid 3.774%. Pressure extended to Netflix, T. Rowe Price, and Microsoft, with declines above 3%.
What Stood Out in New Highs and Lows?
Ten S&P 500 stocks reached all-time highs following the announcement, including Fox Corp Class A and B, General Motors, Ross Stores, TJX, Bank of New York Mellon, Citizens Financial Group, State Street, Synchrony Financial, and GE Vernova. Conversely, five names hit fresh 52-week lows: T-Mobile US, Campbell Soup, Mondelez, Arthur J. Gallagher, and Air Products.
What Should Traders Watch Next?
The mixed voting pattern and cautious tone signal that the bar for additional cuts is rising. Equities remain sensitive to upcoming data and Powell’s commentary. Near-term sentiment leans constructive for the Dow and S&P 500 as traders position around record levels, but leadership will likely hinge on whether tech stabilizes and whether economic updates support the Fed’s current stance.