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Wall Street soars at the end of a choppy week as chipmakers make a jump

Wall Street's major indexes were higher on Friday, as chipmakers took the lead in a volatile and busy week. It was also the beginning of the fourth quarter earnings season.

Memory chip makers led the gains. Micron, Seagate Technology, and SanDisk all saw their shares rise between?2% to 7%. This is a continuation of their explosive growth in 2025.

The iShares Semiconductor ETF rose 2.1% on the Friday, extending its rally of nearly 12% so far this season, which has easily beaten Nasdaq's 1.2% gain. This shows investor confidence in AI-driven chip demand.

Even after S&P 500 and Dow set new records on Monday, U.S. stock prices were limping towards modest weekly losses. The S&P is now just 30 points short of the 7,000-point mark - an?mark analysts have deemed as a possible pocket of technical resistance.

The market was weighed down by concerns over the impact of a proposed cap on credit card rates for a year at 10%, despite good quarterly results from major U.S. Banks.

"Banks have set up this week to show that consumers are still spending money and there is nothing to worry about. Jason Barsema of Halo Investing said that they will watch to see if this translates into increased consumption.

The markets will be closed on Monday in honor of Martin Luther King Jr. Day. However, the earnings season will pick up next week, with Netflix, Johnson & Johnson, and Intel all due to release their results.

9:35 am The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 67.35, or 0.14 %, to 49.509.79. The S&P 500 rose 18.67, or 0.27 %, to 6,963.14, and the Nasdaq Composite added 114.46, or 0.49 %, to 23644.48.

The Defensive Sectors Lead Weekly Gains

The top three sectors for weekly gains were consumer staples, utilities and real estate - all considered to be defensive sectors. Financials, on the other hand, plummeted and were heading for their worst weekly performance since October.

This defensive move comes at a time when uncertainty has been raised about the Federal Reserve's independent after Jerome Powell, the chair of the Federal Reserve, said that the Justice Department had opened a criminal probe into him on Sunday. Kevin Hassett, White House advisor, tried to calm the controversy by dismissing the investigation and saying that he was expecting "nothing here."

This week, the S&P 600 index for mid-cap stocks and the Russell 2000 index for small-cap stocks both saw gains of about 2%.

A series of important economic data has reinforced the bets on a Fed rate pause.

The remarks of Fed Governors Michelle Bowman & Philip Jefferson will provide a 'clue on voting members thinking before the U.S. Central Bank enters its blackout phase ahead of its policy meeting scheduled for January 27-28.

State Street, among other stocks fell 2.7% following a decline in the fourth-quarter profits.

After a report stated that U.S. States experiencing a rapid increase in data center construction would sign an agreement to reduce rising electricity prices with the Trump Administration, independent power producers fell.

Talen Energy fell 9.6% while Constellation Energy, Vistra and Vistra each dropped over 7%.

On the NYSE, declining issues outnumbered advancing ones by a ratio of 1.44 to 1 and by a ratio of 1.17 to 1 on the Nasdaq.

The S&P 500 recorded 23 new 52-week lows and six new highs. Meanwhile, the Nasdaq Composite registered 46 new highs with 28 new lows. Medha Singh in Bengaluru and Pranav Kashyap, Shinjini Gianguli and Maju Sam edited the article.

(source: Reuters)