Daily market regime, sector leadership, scanner-based setups, and a synthesized report.
The regular session is still the story heading into Friday night because after-hours did not change anything meaningful: SPY (SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust) was down just 0.07% after the close and QQQ (Invesco QQQ Trust) was essentially flat. In the cash session, the S&P 500 closed at 7,501.24, up 0.77%, while the Nasdaq finished at 26,635.22, up 0.88%, with SPY (SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust) up 0.79% and QQQ (Invesco QQQ Trust) up 0.71%. One trading day has passed since the 2026-05-14 brief, and the main continuity point is simple: yesterday’s AI-infrastructure leadership did not fade — it broadened and got another leg higher. The macro backdrop still matters, though. Traders are balancing a friendlier Trump-Xi summit tone and renewed China-access hopes for AI hardware against the same unresolved inflation and geopolitical overhangs, including the Iran-oil risk that could quickly reheat the commodity side of the tape.
The biggest driver again was AI capex, but this time the move was not just semis. Networking, process-control, and infrastructure names all joined in, with Cisco’s blowout repricing adding fresh proof that enterprise and hyperscale spending is still flowing. That helps explain why tech stayed in control even as some China-sensitive ADRs and rate-sensitive groups lagged. Breadth was healthier than yesterday at 507 advancers versus 378 decliners, which matters because Thursday’s rally was much less narrow than the prior session’s “few winners, weak internals” setup. Still, there is a tension under the hood: the strongest money is concentrated in specific industries like Communication Equipment, Semiconductors, and Electrical Equipment & Parts, while software, real estate services, and parts of consumer cyclicals are not confirming the same strength.
Rotation data still says risk-on over the 5-day window, with cyclicals beating defensives and a 7-day risk-on streak in the recent sample, but today’s sector map was not pure offense. Consumer Defensive and Energy also held up, which tells you institutions are adding exposure selectively rather than blindly buying beta. In plain English, this is a bullish tape, but it is a stock-picker’s bullish tape. Yesterday’s warning about narrow leadership is less severe now because participation improved, but the contradiction is that some of the hottest leading industries already look short-term stretched while several major sectors still are not helping. That contradiction gets resolved one of two ways: either financials and industrials continue to confirm the move and broaden it, or tech stays alone too long and finally invites a sharp pullback. For swing traders, this is still a market where you can enter new longs, but only in names with real industry sponsorship and only with disciplined entries. The single highest-conviction tactical implication for the next few sessions: keep leaning long into AI-infrastructure and select financial/industrial follow-through, but stop chasing vertical gaps and make the market prove breadth can stay healthy.
What happened: The market stayed glued to the same theme that drove the prior session: companies tied to AI spending are still getting paid. The difference today is that the buying spread beyond the usual GPU names into networking, process-control, and adjacent hardware suppliers, which is healthier than a one-stock story.
How the market reacted: CSCO (Cisco Systems, Inc.) (+13.41%), NVDA (NVIDIA Corporation) (+4.39%), AVGO (Broadcom Inc.) (+5.52%), HPE (Hewlett Packard Enterprise Company) (+6.42%), TSM (Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company Limited) (+4.48%)
What it means for your watchlist: This is still the tape’s highest-quality theme because the buying is moving through the stack instead of staying trapped in one or two mega-caps. When networking, semis, and supporting infrastructure all participate, it usually means institutions still believe the spending cycle is real. The durable version of this story is continued follow-through in second-line winners like HPE (Hewlett Packard Enterprise Company) and TSM (Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company Limited), not just another vertical candle in NVDA (NVIDIA Corporation). The risk is obvious: some of these charts are now extended enough that the better trade may be the first orderly pullback, not the breakout candle itself. What would prove this move is getting tired is if CSCO (Cisco Systems, Inc.) loses its gap or if semis start splitting apart badly even while the index stays green.
What happened: Cisco did not just beat — it changed the way traders are valuing the group. A mature networking company got rerated like a growth name because management tied better numbers and better guidance directly to AI demand and internal capital reallocation toward that opportunity.
How the market reacted: CSCO (Cisco Systems, Inc.) (+13.41%), ASTS (AST SpaceMobile, Inc.) (+10.96%), HPE (Hewlett Packard Enterprise Company) (+6.42%), ERIC (Telefonaktiebolaget LM Ericsson) (+1.12%)
What it means for your watchlist: This matters because Communication Equipment was not just green — it was the strongest industry on the board by a mile. That tells you Cisco’s quarter is being read as a group-level signal, not just a one-day earnings winner. If you are a swing trader, this creates a usable watchlist pocket, but not every chart in the group is equally clean. CSCO (Cisco Systems, Inc.) is now in post-gap price discovery, which is powerful but dangerous to chase, while HPE (Hewlett Packard Enterprise Company) offers a slightly less emotional version of the same theme. What would invalidate the story is a quick failure in the group after the first open or a move where only Cisco holds while the followers fade.
What happened: The market is not only buying chip designers. It is also buying the companies that help make advanced chips, especially where AI demand requires more complex packaging, memory, and process control.
How the market reacted: NVMI (Nova Ltd.) (+10.42%), UMC (United Microelectronics Corporation) (+7.60%), AVGO (Broadcom Inc.) (+5.52%), TSM (Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company Limited) (+4.48%), QCOM (QUALCOMM Incorporated) (-6.14%)
What it means for your watchlist: This is one of the best second-order tells in the whole market. When metrology, foundry, and manufacturing-linked names work with the headline chip winners, it says the market still believes the buildout is moving deeper into the supply chain. NVMI (Nova Ltd.) is especially important because the stock ripped even on only a slight headline miss, which means traders cared more about guidance than the quarter’s small imperfections. The caution is that not every semi is in sync — QCOM (QUALCOMM Incorporated) sold off hard, which reminds you that this is more AI/fab-capex leadership than a blanket semiconductor rally. If that split gets wider, you want to own the infrastructure winners and avoid the laggards rather than buying the whole group.
What happened: Financial Services was green, but not because banks suddenly turned into a clean leadership group. The real strength showed up in capital-markets, credit-services, and asset-manager names — the parts of finance that benefit most when traders are active and risk appetite improves.
How the market reacted: BN (Brookfield Corporation) (+5.41%), HOOD (Robinhood Markets, Inc.) (+5.15%), AFRM (Affirm Holdings, Inc.) (+6.36%), IREN (IREN Limited) (+5.85%), MFC (Manulife Financial Corporation) (-5.80%)
What it means for your watchlist: This is constructive because healthy rallies eventually want some financial participation, and today at least gave you a start. But the quality of the move matters: this was a selective risk-on financial move, not a broad all-clear for banks and insurers. BN (Brookfield Corporation) and HOOD (Robinhood Markets, Inc.) fit the tape much better than sleepy lenders, while MFC (Manulife Financial Corporation) shows the weaker pockets are still being sold. For swing traders, that means you can use financials as a confirmation signal for the broader market, but only through the strongest sub-industries. If the capital-markets pocket rolls over quickly, today’s financial improvement was just a one-day bounce.
What happened: Industrials had a quietly good day under the surface. Transport, electrical equipment, and engineering-related names worked better than the headline sector number suggests, while aerospace stayed mixed and Boeing actually hurt the group.
How the market reacted: JBHT (J.B. Hunt Transport Services, Inc.) (+7.09%), RKLB (Rocket Lab Corporation) (+6.77%), PL (Planet Labs PBC) (+5.65%), J (Jacobs Solutions Inc.) (+5.12%), BA (The Boeing Company) (-4.73%)
What it means for your watchlist: This is the kind of breadth improvement bulls want to see. The best clue is that leadership came from multiple industrial pockets instead of one giant stock. The cross-sector read-through is even better in Electrical Equipment & Parts, where names tied to power and infrastructure keep acting well alongside tech. BA (The Boeing Company) being weak while the broader sector still held up is actually a positive internal sign because it says industrial strength is not dependent on a single headline. If transports and power equipment keep gaining while aerospace remains messy, you have a cleaner place to hunt setups.
What happened: Some of the weakest charts on the board were not in the obvious defensive sectors. They were in real-estate services and software, which tells you the market is still unforgiving where growth quality or rate sensitivity is questionable.
How the market reacted: HUBS (HubSpot, Inc.) (-19.03%), JLL (Jones Lang LaSalle Incorporated) (-7.00%), CBRE (CBRE Group, Inc.) (-5.83%), SE (Sea Limited) (-5.55%)
What it means for your watchlist: This is the best reminder not to confuse a bullish index tape with universal opportunity. If software application names and rate-sensitive property-service names are still getting punished this hard, the market is demanding very specific narratives and very clean execution. That matters for swing traders because it pushes you toward relative-strength hunting rather than broad ETF-style thinking. It also means failed leaders can stay weak longer than you expect even while the indexes are making highs. What proves that condition is changing is if software starts participating and the real-estate damage stops spreading. Until then, weak charts are still weak for a reason.
What happened: Yesterday autos looked like a surprise broad cyclical leadership pocket. Today the sector result was weaker, but individual winners still popped where there was either company-specific relief or travel demand support.
How the market reacted: F (Ford Motor Company) (+6.71%), VIK (Viking Holdings Ltd) (+5.54%), HMC (Honda Motor Co., Ltd.) (+5.33%), NIO (NIO Inc.) (-4.43%), AMZN (Amazon.com, Inc.) (-1.08%)
What it means for your watchlist: The takeaway is that yesterday’s broad cyclical enthusiasm cooled into a much more selective tape. Autos are still tradable, but the group is no longer moving as one clean basket. Travel held up through VIK (Viking Holdings Ltd), while F (Ford Motor Company) and HMC (Honda Motor Co., Ltd.) worked for idiosyncratic reasons, not because the whole consumer complex turned strong. That makes stock selection more important than sector selection here. If leaders like Ford and Viking hold while internet retail and EV laggards keep slipping, consumer cyclical stays a trading pocket, not a true leadership sector.
| Sector / Industry | 1D | 5D | 20D | Trend | Standout |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Technology | +2.0% | +5.29% | +16.72% | 83 | CSCO (Cisco Systems, Inc.) (+13.41%) |
| Financial Services | +0.8% | -0.33% | -1.08% | 66 | BN (Brookfield Corporation) (+5.41%) |
| Industrials | +0.7% | +1.04% | +3.93% | 70 | JBHT (J.B. Hunt Transport Services, Inc.) (+7.09%) |
| Energy | +0.63% | +2.98% | +1.62% | 72 | WMB (The Williams Companies, Inc.) (+2.62%) |
| Consumer Defensive | +0.52% | +1.89% | +5.78% | 64 | PM (Philip Morris International Inc.) (+2.10%) |
| Utilities | +0.5% | -0.5% | -2.31% | 59 | NRG (NRG Energy, Inc.) (+2.78%) |
| Healthcare | -0.2% | +1.38% | +0.26% | 51 | CAH (Cardinal Health, Inc.) (+4.31%) |
| Communication Services | -0.21% | +0.37% | +11.0% | 58 | APP (AppLovin Corporation) (+6.97%) |
| Consumer Cyclical | -0.36% | -0.32% | +1.97% | 61 | F (Ford Motor Company) (+6.71%) |
| Real Estate | -0.67% | -0.88% | +0.57% | 39 | O (Realty Income Corporation) (+0.72%) |
| Basic Materials | -1.4% | +3.04% | +1.81% | 41 | FCX (Freeport-McMoRan Inc.) (-1.52%) |
Technology is still the real leader, and today the proof sits inside Communication Equipment and Semiconductors, not just at the sector level. That matters because this is not a cap-weighted illusion — CSCO (Cisco Systems, Inc.), HPE (Hewlett Packard Enterprise Company), NVDA (NVIDIA Corporation), and AVGO (Broadcom Inc.) all speak the same language. In a strong_bull_trend regime, that kind of industry confirmation is what lets swing traders stay involved on the long side. The only caution is that the sector’s momentum tag is still “declining” despite the price strength, which usually means leadership is powerful but getting concentrated and more vulnerable to pullback entries than breakout chasing.
Financial Services was the other notable winner, but the better read is industry-first, sector-second. Asset Management and Capital Markets did the real work, with BN (Brookfield Corporation) and HOOD (Robinhood Markets, Inc.) confirming the move, while the sector itself still has negative 5D and 20D returns. That is a classic early-repair setup: the money is arriving, but the longer timeframe has not fully flipped yet. With rotation still risk-on over the last 5 days, that makes financials an improving confirmation group rather than the primary place to press size.
The noisiest “leadership” call is Communication Services. The sector was red on the day, yet Advertising Agencies printed one of the strongest industry gains because APP (AppLovin Corporation) ripped while TTD (The Trade Desk, Inc.) dropped hard. That is not broad strength — that is a narrow internal split, and narrow moves usually have worse follow-through than broad ones.
The inverse case is Healthcare. The sector finished red, but Medical Distribution quietly accelerated with CAH (Cardinal Health, Inc.) and COR (Cencora, Inc.) acting better than the parent wrapper. That tells you the sector headline is weaker than the internals in at least one pocket. In practice, that means healthcare is still not a clean long sector ETF trade, but it does contain individual names worth watching if tech gets too crowded.
The clearest cross-sector tell is that infrastructure is beating applications. In Technology, Communication Equipment, Semiconductors, and Semiconductor Equipment & Materials all worked, while software-related pockets stayed much less convincing. NVMI (Nova Ltd.), CSCO (Cisco Systems, Inc.), and AVGO (Broadcom Inc.) all point to the same message: the market still wants the tools, plumbing, and picks-and-shovels of AI more than the software layer.
A second tell is that Electrical Equipment & Parts is acting like a hidden growth industry inside Industrials. BE (Bloom Energy Corporation) and VRT (Vertiv Holdings Co) fit the same power-and-infrastructure buildout that is helping tech. That cross-sector alignment is bullish because it broadens the AI/power demand story beyond silicon.
A third tell is that Copper and Steel are still better than their weak parent sector, Basic Materials, even after today’s damage. FCX (Freeport-McMoRan Inc.) and VALE (Vale S.A.) were down, but the 5D picture in Copper still looks stronger than the sector headline suggests. That makes materials a “watch for rebound or failure” group rather than a clean short or clean long. If those industries recover quickly, the selloff was just a shakeout. If they do not, the whole rotation into hard-asset cyclicals is fading.
Fear & Greed sits at 66.1, Greed, which is elevated but not yet at the kind of euphoric reading that usually forces an immediate contrarian call. The more useful nuance is inside the components: momentum and options appetite are hot, but breadth is still weaker than those sentiment gauges would suggest. That usually means traders are pressing leaders aggressively while still not fully trusting the whole market. Add in 7 risk-on days versus 0 risk-off days in the recent rotation window, and you get a tape that deserves respect but is increasingly vulnerable to a fast cooling move if leadership narrows again.
The cleanest reversal scenario is exhaustion in Communication Equipment and Semiconductors while the broader market refuses to broaden further. If names like CSCO (Cisco Systems, Inc.) and NVDA (NVIDIA Corporation) stop holding their breakout gains, and Capital Markets or Electrical Equipment & Parts fail to pick up the slack, the market falls back into a narrow-tech problem. The current bullish thesis would be invalidated if software stays weak, real estate services keeps breaking down, and financials fail to confirm their repair bounce. A hotter inflation, oil, or geopolitical headline would be the fastest way to trigger that flip.
CSCO (Cisco Systems, Inc.) (+13.41%) — purest read on whether communication-equipment leadership can hold a massive earnings gap.
NVMI (Nova Ltd.) (+10.42%) — best chart for semi-equipment guidance strength inside the AI supply chain.
BN (Brookfield Corporation) (+5.41%) — tells you whether improving financials are real or just a one-day rotation burst.
BE (Bloom Energy Corporation) (+4.71%) — clean cross-sector chart for the power/infrastructure buildout theme.
JLL (Jones Lang LaSalle Incorporated) (-7.00%) — failure chart that captures how weak real estate services remains under the surface.
1) AVGO (Broadcom Inc.) — Score 67 — 1D +5.52% | 5D +6.60% | 20D +10.37%
2) NVMI (Nova Ltd.) — Score 82 — 1D +10.42% | 5D +10.22% | 20D +8.15%
3) CSCO (Cisco Systems, Inc.) — Score 71 — 1D +13.41% | 5D +25.36% | 20D +36.72%
4) HPE (Hewlett Packard Enterprise Company) — Score 68 — 1D +6.42% | 5D +14.92% | 20D +31.83%
5) BN (Brookfield Corporation) — Score 58 — 1D +5.41% | 5D +2.19% | 20D +3.44%
1) FFIV (F5, Inc.) — Score 96 — 1D +2.01% | 5D +5.67% | 20D +18.35%
2) MRVL (Marvell Technology, Inc.) — Score 94 — 1D +2.60% | 5D +14.11% | 20D +36.90%
3) STM (STMicroelectronics N.V.) — Score 95 — 1D +1.56% | 5D +15.17% | 20D +54.87%
4) RPRX (Royalty Pharma plc) — Score 88 — 1D +0.28% | 5D +6.37% | 20D +10.15%
5) CBOE (Cboe Global Markets, Inc.) — Score 92 — 1D -2.19% | 5D +5.91% | 20D +15.93%
This brief is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Do your own research and consider your risk tolerance before trading.