OR Wall Street It has retreated from the new intra -day highs of all time on Thursday (9.10.25), with the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite indicators taking a “breath” from the earnings of the previous meeting, as the impasse on the closure of the US government continues.
Wall Street’s wide indicator, the S&P 500, fell 0.28% to 6,735.11 points, while the technological Nasdaq Composite fell 0.08%, closing at 23,024.63 points. At the high of the day, the S&P 500 was 0.2% and Nasdaq was 0.1%. The Dow Jones industrial index, meanwhile, fell by 243.36 points or 0.52%, closing at 46,358.42 points.
Both the S&P 500 and Nasdaq came from a record meeting on Wednesday, with the first marking his eighth upward day in the last nine and the second closing above the 23,000 units for the first time in his history. Dow Jones, on the other hand, completed slightly lower on the same day, as Blue Chips shares were sluggish. However, Nvidia has helped the 30 companies’ index limit the losses, recording a rise of more than 2% following the statement by CEO Jensen Huang to CNBC that the demand for computers has “increased significantly” this year, according to CNBC.
“Obviously, the market has made an uninterrupted rise from April corrections, leading some to believe that the stock market has overheated, making calls for a respite at a time when the classic” Buy the Dip “strategy remains strong”, said David Wagner, head of stock at Aptus Capital Advisors. “This market is just continuing to go up. This is an intra -conference switch that can cause temporary instability or fluctuations’.
Oracle was a bright exception on Thursday, along with Nvidia, who recorded a new historical high. The two shares were raised by 3% and almost 2% respectively. The couple had lost earlier this week, following a report that Oracle’s Cloud activity faces reduced profit margins due to challenges in Nvidia’s chip rental.