The Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) was up 48.95 (0.0990%) points today, closing at 49,500.93, as investors reacted to a critical Consumer Price Index (CPI) report that signaled a faster-than-expected cooling of inflation. The January CPI rose 2.4% year-over-year, coming in below the 2.5% consensus estimate and marking a five-year low. This softer reading immediately shifted market sentiment, with CME FedWatch tools now pricing in an 83% probability of a Federal Reserve interest rate cut by June. The cooling data provided a much-needed relief rally following a volatile trading week dominated by concerns over artificial intelligence capital expenditures and potential tariff-induced price spikes.
The primary narrative driving today's session was the bond market's response to the inflation data, which eased pressure on equities. The 10-year Treasury yield fell to 4.06%, down from 4.09% on Thursday, as the report showed decelerating price pressures in shelter, food, and medical services. This macro environment favored cyclical and value-oriented stocks within the Dow, allowing the index to stabilize and outperform tech-heavy benchmarks that remained weighed down by a rotation out of high-valuation growth names.
Among individual performers, Nike (NKE) led the gainers with a 3.37% surge to $63.17 after announcing a major restructuring of its Converse unit and a "Win Now" turnaround strategy. Other significant gainers included Salesforce (CRM), which rose 3.00% to $191.07, and Caterpillar (CAT), climbing 2.98% to $780.55. Conversely, the session saw notable declines in Visa (V), which dropped 1.99% to $317.89, and 3M (MMM), falling 1.59% to $171.85. Nvidia (NVDA) also slipped 1.28% to $184.53 as broader AI-led momentum continued to face profit-taking.
Ed Liston is a senior contributing editor at TheStockMarketWatch.com. An active market watcher and investor, Ed guides an independent team of experienced analysts and writes for multiple stock trader publications.