Daily market regime, sector leadership, scanner-based setups, and a synthesized report.
The market is still leaning risk-on into the weekend, and the most important detail is that the strength held after the bell: SPY (SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust) was up roughly 0.79% after hours and QQQ (Invesco QQQ Trust) was up about 1.88%, which keeps the chip-and-AI leadership story firmly in control for Monday. During the regular session, the S&P 500 closed at 7,165.08, up 0.80%, and the Nasdaq closed at 24,836.60, up 1.63%, so the after-hours action did not reverse the day’s message — it reinforced it. One trading day has passed since the 2026-04-24 brief, and yesterday’s warning about rotation versus real breakdown got resolved in favor of semis: software damage did not spread; chips simply took over harder. Intel’s earnings-driven blast higher, Nvidia reclaiming the $5 trillion market-cap conversation, and fresh AI capex headlines from Alphabet, Meta, and Amazon kept money concentrated in the same part of the tape that has been carrying this rally.
The macro backdrop is still awkward even if price is not showing much fear. Iran-related headlines and energy-route anxiety have cooled enough to support risk appetite, but weak consumer sentiment and oil sensitivity are still sitting in the background as unresolved risks rather than dead stories. That is why this remains a tradable uptrend, not a carefree one. Breadth was still poor at 379 advancers vs 506 decliners, which matters because the indexes were strong while fewer than half the stocks in the universe were up. In plain English: this was not a broad “everything works” session — it was another narrow rally led by tech and especially semis.
That narrowness shows up in the cross-currents. The broad market was up 0.34%, SPY (SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust) was up 0.77%, and QQQ (Invesco QQQ Trust) was up 1.91%, so the farther you moved toward large-cap growth, the better the tape looked. Rotation data still reads risk-on, with cyclicals beating defensives and Technology entering leadership, but sector-level internals are less clean than the index action suggests. Healthcare, Industrials, and Financials are leaking sponsorship, while defensive groups are not collapsing enough to confirm a full-throttle broadening phase. That contradiction — strong index breakout, weak participation — gets resolved one of two ways next week: either more sectors join the move, or semis finally pause and the indexes feel the lack of backup. For swing traders, this is still a market to take longs in, but size should stay smaller than the headline index gains might tempt you to use because the regime is still narrow_rally, not broad expansion. Highest-conviction tactical implication for the next few sessions: stay long-biased only in names with real relative strength — mostly semis and selective clean breakouts — and avoid assuming the strong index close means the average stock is safe to buy.
What happened: Intel’s quarter did more than beat numbers — it changed sentiment around the whole chip complex. Traders treated the report as proof that the semiconductor upcycle is no longer just about one or two AI winners, but a broader demand recovery with real earnings power behind it.
How the market reacted: INTC (Intel Corporation) (+23.6%), AMD (Advanced Micro Devices, Inc.) (+13.9%), ARM (Arm Holdings plc) (+14.8%), QCOM (QUALCOMM Incorporated) (+11.1%), RMBS (Rambus Inc.) (+14.4%), SNPS (Synopsys, Inc.) (+9.6%)
What it means for your watchlist: This is the clearest continuation story in the market right now. Yesterday’s brief said semis could absorb software damage and reassert leadership; that happened immediately and aggressively. The good news is that the move was broad, not just one stock, with chip designers, memory-adjacent names, and tools all participating. The bad news is entry quality: a lot of these charts are now in runaway mode, which means the story is bullish but the risk/reward for fresh chasing is worse. What proves this wrong is simple: if Intel fails to hold the gap and names like AMD (Advanced Micro Devices, Inc.) and QCOM (QUALCOMM Incorporated) start giving back big chunks of today’s move, that would tell you this was more squeeze than durable accumulation.
What happened: The AI arms race kept feeding the tape beyond earnings. Alphabet’s planned investment in Anthropic, Nvidia’s market-cap milestone, and Meta’s use of Amazon’s Graviton chips all reinforced the same message: big companies are still spending huge money to secure AI infrastructure and compute capacity.
How the market reacted: NVDA (NVIDIA Corporation) (+4.3%), GOOGL (Alphabet Inc.) (+1.6%), AMZN (Amazon.com, Inc.) (+3.5%), SMCI (Super Micro Computer, Inc.) (+8.7%), ALAB (Astera Labs, Inc.) (+7.7%)
What it means for your watchlist: This matters because it broadens the AI story beyond just GPUs. There is now real money flowing into the picks-and-shovels stack: compute, networking, hardware, memory interface, and custom silicon. That is why second-tier winners like ALAB (Astera Labs, Inc.) and SMCI (Super Micro Computer, Inc.) still matter even when everyone is staring at Nvidia. The durability here is better than a normal headline pop because the underlying theme is capex, not just excitement. The risk is crowding: when everyone knows the same story, leadership can remain strong but entries become far less forgiving.
What happened: Charter’s earnings miss landed badly because the market read it as more than one ugly quarter. Broadband subscriber pressure, heavy capital spending, and renewed concern about fiber and wireless competition dragged the whole cable/telecom pocket lower, including peers that had already been wobbling.
How the market reacted: CHTR (Charter Communications, Inc.) (-25.5%), CMCSA (Comcast Corporation) (-12.9%), T (AT&T Inc.) (-1.5%), VZ (Verizon Communications Inc.) (-1.8%)
What it means for your watchlist: This is one of those stories where “cheap” can stay cheap for a long time if the core business stops growing. Charter’s chart is now badly damaged, and Comcast’s sympathy collapse shows the market is not giving this group the benefit of the doubt. For swing traders, that means no automatic bottom-fishing just because the stocks look statistically oversold. If you want to trade a bounce here, it has to be treated as a fast tactical trade, not a conviction swing. The invalidation for the bearish read would be a fast reclaim of broken levels — especially if CHTR (Charter Communications, Inc.) gets back above the 200 area and CMCSA (Comcast Corporation) holds its first rebound attempt.
What happened: Healthcare was one of the worst sectors again, but the action underneath was mixed rather than uniformly bad. Novo Nordisk outperformed while Eli Lilly and hospital operators lagged, which tells you the market is rewarding clean product momentum and punishing any sign of growth or utilization disappointment.
How the market reacted: NVO (Novo Nordisk A/S) (+6.9%), HCA (HCA Healthcare, Inc.) (-8.8%), BSX (Boston Scientific Corporation) (-5.5%), EW (Edwards Lifesciences Corporation) (+5.6%)
What it means for your watchlist: This is not a clean sector-long environment. There are tradeable winners inside healthcare, but they are stock-specific and need their own catalyst. Yesterday’s brief made the same point with WST (West Pharmaceutical Services, Inc.), and today’s action confirmed it again: the sector can stay weak while one or two names still break out. The strongest takeaway is that quality matters more than sector allocation here. If you are scanning healthcare charts, focus on post-earnings strength and relative strength names like EW (Edwards Lifesciences Corporation), not broad ETF exposure.
What happened: Even with tech screaming higher, money still flowed into gold miners. That is a useful tell: traders are willing to stay risk-on in growth, but they have not fully let go of macro hedges tied to geopolitical and inflation uncertainty.
How the market reacted: NEM (Newmont Corporation) (+8.7%), GFI (Gold Fields Limited) (+4.1%), B (Barrick Mining Corporation) (+2.2%), FCX (Freeport-McMoRan Inc.) (-0.7%)
What it means for your watchlist: This is not the main market story, but it matters because it shows conviction is not pure euphoria. When gold works on a strong tech day, it usually means macro anxiety is being managed, not ignored. That can support selective materials trades, but it also warns against getting too complacent about the risk backdrop. If oil or geopolitical headlines flare again, these names can pick up leadership quickly. If they roll over while tech keeps rising, then today’s move was likely just hedge maintenance rather than a new trend leg.
What happened: Energy finished slightly red at the sector level, but that hides a real internal split. Exploration and integrated oils were soft while oilfield services kept catching bids, helped by earnings, project activity, and the market’s preference for service providers over pure commodity exposure.
How the market reacted: BKR (Baker Hughes Company) (+6.9%), SLB (SLB Limited) (+2.6%), FTI (TechnipFMC plc) (+3.2%), CNQ (Canadian Natural Resources Limited) (-2.6%), VG (Venture Global, Inc.) (-8.1%)
What it means for your watchlist: This is a good example of why sector ETFs can hide the real trade. Oil services are one of the strongest groups inside a sector that otherwise looks indecisive. That means swing traders should focus on sub-industry leadership instead of making a broad call on “energy.” The bullish case is continued follow-through in service names if crude stays stable and capital spending holds up. The bearish case is that the broader oil trade keeps stalling and drags even the strongest subgroup down with it.
| Sector | 1D | 5D | 20D | Trend | Standout |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Technology | +2.82% | +3.91% | +21.12% | 88 | INTC (Intel Corporation) (+23.6%) |
| Consumer Cyclical | +1.20% | -1.29% | +6.91% | 63 | FLUT (Flutter Entertainment plc) (+5.2%) |
| Communication Services | +1.05% | -0.36% | +12.19% | 67 | TTD (The Trade Desk, Inc.) (+6.0%) |
| Basic Materials | +0.70% | -1.69% | +5.60% | 65 | NEM (Newmont Corporation) (+8.7%) |
| Utilities | +0.36% | +0.38% | +2.05% | 52 | CEG (Constellation Energy Corporation) (+7.1%) |
| Real Estate | -0.28% | -1.33% | +10.85% | 48 | AGNC (AGNC Investment Corp.) (+1.5%) |
| Consumer Defensive | -0.32% | +1.00% | +1.49% | 52 | PG (Procter & Gamble Company (The)) (+2.5%) |
| Financial Services | -0.34% | -2.68% | +4.13% | 48 | NDAQ (Nasdaq, Inc.) (+3.3%) |
| Energy | -0.39% | +3.21% | +0.33% | 47 | BKR (Baker Hughes Company) (+6.9%) |
| Industrials | -0.94% | -0.33% | +4.87% | 47 | PL (Planet Labs PBC) (-7.4%) |
| Healthcare | -1.11% | -3.27% | -4.89% | 39 | NVO (Novo Nordisk A/S) (+6.9%) |
Technology (1D +2.82% / 5D +3.91% / 20D +21.12%, Trend 88) is the cleanest aligned leader on the board even though its momentum label is still “declining.” That sounds contradictory, but the key is that the sector just reset and immediately resumed higher, with a new 1-day up streak and strong breadth.
Utilities (1D +0.36% / 5D +0.38% / 20D +2.05%, Trend 52) also have all three timeframes positive, but the move is much weaker and narrower. Healthcare (1D -1.11% / 5D -3.27% / 20D -4.89%, Trend 39) is the cleanest aligned laggard, while Consumer Cyclical (1D +1.20% / 5D -1.29% / 20D +6.91%, Trend 63) is still just a bounce inside a mixed short-term structure rather than a fully confirmed trend.
Technology (1D +2.82% / 5D +3.91% / 20D +21.12%, Trend 88) had both strong returns and solid breadth at 68%, so today’s strength was not just cap-weighted theater. That makes its follow-through odds better than yesterday’s more fractured tech tape.
Utilities (1D +0.36% / 5D +0.38% / 20D +2.05%, Trend 52) are trickier because the sector had a breadth divergence flag with only 34% of names advancing. That means the sector headline was helped heavily by a few strong names like CEG (Constellation Energy Corporation), TLN (Talen Energy Corporation), and VST (Vistra Corp.), not broad participation.
Industrials (1D -0.94% / 5D -0.33% / 20D +4.87%, Trend 47) and Energy (1D -0.39% / 5D +3.21% / 20D +0.33%, Trend 47) show the opposite problem: medium-term returns still look okay, but recent price action is not confirming. That is usually what leadership looks like right before it either reasserts itself or gets fully rotated out.
Technology (1D +2.82% / 5D +3.91% / 20D +21.12%, Trend 88) and Consumer Cyclical (1D +1.20% / 5D -1.29% / 20D +6.91%, Trend 63) were the top two sectors, while Industrials (1D -0.94% / 5D -0.33% / 20D +4.87%, Trend 47) and Healthcare (1D -1.11% / 5D -3.27% / 20D -4.89%, Trend 39) were the weakest. That fits the regime: the market still reads risk-on, but increasingly through a small number of growth-heavy groups rather than a broad cyclical wave.
Fear & Greed sits at 66 / greed, which is elevated but not yet at the kind of extreme that automatically screams fade. The more important signal is that rotation.momentum_shift_1d = risk_on and rotation.momentum_shift_5d = risk_on, while the 10-day trend still shows 9 risk-on days vs 1 risk-off day. The caution flag is that the rotation direction is getting “increasingly risk-off” underneath the surface, which is another way of saying the market is narrowing even while it rises.
INTC (Intel Corporation) is not a solo act inside Technology (1D +2.82% / 5D +3.91% / 20D +21.12%, Trend 88). The sub-industry support is real: Semiconductors (1D +4.88% / 5D +7.98% / 20D +35.71%, Trend 93) and Semiconductor Equipment & Materials (1D +3.82% / 5D +2.98% / 20D +16.15%, Trend 97) are both improving.
CEG (Constellation Energy Corporation) is more concentrated inside Utilities (1D +0.36% / 5D +0.38% / 20D +2.05%, Trend 52). The reason to still respect it is that Utilities - Independent Power Producers (1D +5.82% / 5D +2.32% / 20D +11.14%, Trend 92) are improving broadly, but the rest of utilities are not nearly as healthy.
NVO (Novo Nordisk A/S) is not enough to fix Healthcare (1D -1.11% / 5D -3.27% / 20D -4.89%, Trend 39). Too many sub-industries remain weak, especially Medical Care Facilities (1D -6.20% / 5D -8.59% / 20D -11.14%, Trend 33) and Biotechnology (1D -1.31% / 5D -3.75% / 20D -2.85%, Trend 37).
The bullish flip would be a broadening move where Communication Services (1D +1.05% / 5D -0.36% / 20D +12.19%, Trend 67), Financial Services (1D -0.34% / 5D -2.68% / 20D +4.13%, Trend 48), and Industrials (1D -0.94% / 5D -0.33% / 20D +4.87%, Trend 47) stop lagging and join technology. That would make this rally healthier and let swing traders size up.
The bearish flip is simpler: Technology (1D +2.82% / 5D +3.91% / 20D +21.12%, Trend 88) is now doing almost all the heavy lifting. If that group pauses while the rest of the board stays weak, the narrow-rally problem becomes much bigger very quickly.
INTC (Intel Corporation) (+23.6%) — pure read on whether the semiconductor breakout can hold a huge earnings gap.
QCOM (QUALCOMM Incorporated) (+11.1%) — cleaner breakout quality than the highest-beta AI names.
EW (Edwards Lifesciences Corporation) (+5.6%) — rare healthcare breakout in a weak sector, which makes relative strength obvious.
BKR (Baker Hughes Company) (+6.9%) — best chart for the oil-services strength hiding inside a messy energy tape.
CHTR (Charter Communications, Inc.) (-25.5%) — useful damaged-chart example to avoid low-quality bottom-fishing.
1) QCOM (QUALCOMM Incorporated) — Score 89 — 1D +11.1% | 5D +9.3% | 20D +14.0%
2) EW (Edwards Lifesciences Corporation) — Score 91 — 1D +5.6% | 5D +3.9% | 20D +2.5%
3) RMBS (Rambus Inc.) — Score 67 — 1D +14.4% | 5D +24.8% | 20D +73.2%
4) NDAQ (Nasdaq, Inc.) — Score 57 — 1D +3.3% | 5D +1.5% | 20D +7.3%
1) MRVL (Marvell Technology, Inc.) — Score 94 — 1D -0.8% | 5D +17.6% | 20D +68.3%
2) STM (STMicroelectronics N.V.) — Score 94 — 1D +1.5% | 5D +14.1% | 20D +53.4%
3) NOK (Nokia Corporation Sponsored ADR) — Score 94 — 1D +1.3% | 5D +1.5% | 20D +26.3%
4) CM (Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce) — Score 87 — 1D +0.9% | 5D +0.2% | 20D +17.1%
5) RPRX (Royalty Pharma plc) — Score 85 — 1D -0.5% | 5D -1.2% | 20D +5.2%
This brief is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Do your own research and consider your risk tolerance before trading.