US stocks bounce back
US stock indices posted broad-based gains on Thursday, with leadership rotating back towards banks and small-cap stocks. The Dow and Russell 2000 outperformed, adding 0.6% and 0.9%, respectively. Both were helped by renewed interest in Financials. The S&P 500 and NASDAQ gained 0.3% each.

Source: TN Trader
Semiconductor stocks also got some love. There was widespread buying across the sector after the Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) delivered blowout fourth-quarter results. TSMC also announced plans to raise capital expenditures this year. This news was welcomed by investors as cap ex promises did much to boost AI-adjacent corporations for most of 2025.
The news reignited enthusiasm for the AI trade and helped lift Nvidia and AMD by around 2% each. The sector certainly has room to the upside following the pullback over the last quarter of 2025. Sentiment was further buoyed by news of a US–Taiwan trade agreement, under which Taiwanese chip and technology firms will invest at least $250 billion in US production capacity.
Banking stocks also moved back into favour following strong earnings from Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley. Shares of Goldman jumped more than 4%, while Morgan Stanley climbed nearly 6%, helping to lift the Dow as both are major constituents.
Earlier in the week, JP Morgan, Wells Fargo, Citigroup and Bank of America all sold off immediately after releasing their quarterly updates. Citigroup bounced back yesterday, as did JP Morgan and Bank of America to a lesser degree. Wells Fargo has continued to drop and has not found any support yet. Overall, it would be fair to characterise these banking results as mixed. But investors have hopes that a clutch of high-profile private companies, including SpaceX and OpenAI, will spark an uptick in IPOs this year.
Stock index futures were comfortably firmer across the board on Friday morning. Despite a hiccup earlier in the week, investor sentiment appears positive. There has been a broadening out of ownership with many investors snapping up overlooked stocks, which appear to offer good value when compared to the tech giants.
At the same time, a lot of froth was blown off AI and other tech stocks last quarter. While there are concerns over the Trump administration’s meddling and open hostility to the Federal Reserve’s Chair, Jerome Powell, the overall takeaway is that lower rates are coming regardless. Meanwhile, equities don’t appear overbought, and volatility is low. Geopolitical risk has once again taken a backseat. What could possibly go wrong?



















