Lola Evans
28 Jan 2026, 02:41 GMT+10
NEW YORK, New York - U.S. equity markets delivered a split performance on Tuesday, as a powerful rally in technology shares propelled the Nasdaq higher, while the Standard and Poor's 500 jumped to a fresh all-time closing high. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell significantly.
The tech-heavy NASDAQ Composite was the standout performer, surging 0.91 percent to close at 23,817.10.
The broad-market Standard and Poor's 500 carved out a new historic peak, gaining 0.41 percent to finish at 6,978.57.
In a stark contrast, the Dow Jones Industrial Average bucked the positive trend, retreating 0.83 percent, or 408.99 points, to settle at 49,003.41. The divergence highlighted a significant rotation out of some industrial and cyclical names and into the megacap technology sector, which led the market's advance.
"There's a little bit of a bifurcated market today with the Dow down because of the announcements around Medicare premiums," Phil Blancato, chief market strategist at Osaic Wealth in New York told Reuters news agency Tuesday. "When you look at everything else, the market seems to be hanging in there waiting for a big week of earnings."
U.S. Dollar Tumbles further Tuesday; Commodity Currencies and Euro Surge
The U.S. dollar faced broad-based intensive selling pressure in Tuesday's foreign exchange session, lifting major rivals and fueling significant gains in commodity-linked currencies.
The greenback's decline was most pronounced against traditional safe-haven peers. The US dollar / Swiss franc (USD/CHF) pair tumbled 1.28 percent, with one dollar buying 0.7661 francs. The US dollar / Japanese yen (USD/JPY) also fell sharply, dropping 0.89 percent to 152.76 yen.
The euro capitalized on the dollar's weakness, with EUR/USD rising 0.82 percent to trade at 1.1977. The British pound followed suit, as GBP/USD advanced 0.77 percent to 1.3781.
Commodity currencies were among the day's strongest performers, buoyed by the weaker dollar and firmer global risk sentiment. The Australian dollar led the charge, with AUD/USD jumping 0.92 percent to 0.6978. The New Zealand dollar also posted a solid gain, as NZD/USD climbed 0.72 percent to 0.6015.
The Canadian dollar strengthened, pushing the US dollar / Canadian dollar (USD/CAD) pair down 0.64 percent to 1.3619.
Analysts attributed the dollar's pullback to a combination of volatile moves by the U.S. administration, profit-taking after recent strength and a modest recalibration of market expectations for the pace of Federal Reserve policy. The moves allowed other major currencies to recover some ground lost in prior sessions, setting the stage for heightened volatility ahead of key economic data releases later in the week.
Global Markets Mixed on Tuesday; Asia-Pacific Shares Lead Gains
Global equity markets presented a mixed picture on Tuesday, with strong performances across the Asia-Pacific region contrasting with a more subdued and varied session in Europe.
Canada's main benchmark ended the session essentially unchanged. The S&P/TSX Composite Index inched up a mere 0.01 percent, adding 3.08 points to close at 33,096.40, as gains in materials and tech were offset by weakness in other sectors.
In the UK, the FTSE 100 added 0.58 percent, settling at 10,207.80.
European bourses finished mostly higher, though gains were modest. The pan-European EURO STOXX 50 was a relative outperformer, climbing 0.62 percent to close at 5,994.59. France's CAC 40 advanced 0.27 percent to 8,152.82, while the
Germany's DAX bucked the positive trend, Tuesday dipping 0.15 percent to 24,894.44. In Belgium the BEL 20 was a standout gainer in the region, jumping 1.20 percent to close at 5,396.81.
In Asia, trading was overwhelmingly positive. South Korea's KOSPI Composite Index surged 2.73 percent, leading major regional indices.
In Japan the Nikkei 225 continued its strong run, gaining 0.85 percent to close at 53,333.54.
Australia's S&P/ASX 200 rose 0.92 percent, and Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index advanced a solid 1.35 percent.
Other Asia-Pacific markets also posted healthy gains Tuesday. Singapore's STI Index rose 1.28 percent, New Zealand's S&P/NZX 50 added 0.37 percent, and Taiwan's TWSE Index was up 0.79 percent.
In Malaysia the FTSE Bursa Malaysia KLCI jumped 1.56 percent.
In other global markets, India's S&P BSE SENSEX edged up 0.39 percent, while in th Middle East, Egypt's EGX 30 gained 0.69 percent.
In Israel the TA-125 was virtually flat, dipping a marginal 0.06 percent.
The day's trading highlighted a continued divergence in regional momentum, with investors in Asia showing stronger appetite for risk amid varying economic signals and corporate earnings reports globally.
(This report incorporates quotes retrieved with the assistance of artificial intelligence).
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Monday 26 January 2026 | Wall Street edges up despite hammering of U.S. dollar | Big News Network.com
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