Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange during morning trading on January 14, 2026 in New York City.
Michael M. Santiago | Getty Images
The Dow Jones Industrial Average climbed more than 300 points Thursday, rebounding from back-to-back losses as chip and banks stocks rallied.
The 30-stock index added 359 points, or 0.7%, boosted by gains in Goldman Sachs and Nvidia. The S&P 500 climbed 0.6%, while the Nasdaq Composite advanced 0.9%.
Semiconductors led the market after Taiwan Semiconductor delivered another record quarter, saying it expects to boost capital spending in 2026 to between $52 billion and $56 billion — an outlook signaling confidence in the artificial intelligence buildout from the world’s largest contract chipmaker. The stock jumped more than 6%.
The VanEck Semiconductor ETF (SMH) climbed 3%, with Nvidia and Micron Technology adding more than 2% each.
“Taiwan Semi’s results today, and more importantly, their capex spending plans point to reassuring investors that the AI trade is not necessarily a bubble at this point,” said Kim Forrest, investment chief at Bokeh Capital Partners. “They’re going to spend money, lots of money, to build out capacity.”
Bank stocks rose following the latest raft of quarterly earnings. Morgan Stanley shares gained more than 3% after the bank reported fourth-quarter results that exceeded expectations. Goldman Sachs jumped about 2% after topping profit estimates in its most recent quarter.
A pullback in oil prices was also supportive of the market, with Brent crude oil futures and front-end West Texas Intermediate crude both sliding more than 4%.
The latest economic data also pointed to a solid jobs market. Jobless claims data for the week ending Jan. 10 came in at 198,000, lower than the 215,000 expected by economists polled by Dow Jones.
Thursday’s comeback comes off the heels of two straight losing sessions on Wall Street, as a slide in tech and geopolitical risks weighed on investor sentiment. Nvidia is lower this week after Reuters reported, citing individuals briefed on the matter, that Chinese customs authorities advised customs agents this week that the chipmaker’s H200 chips are not allowed to enter the country.
Oil prices were higher earlier this week as mounting tensions between the U.S. and top OPEC member Iran added to fears of supply disruptions. They’ve since slid after Trump signaled he might not attack Iran.
Trump administration officials also met with Danish and Greenlandic foreign ministers on Wednesday as Trump continues to push for U.S. control of Greenland. Denmark and Trump have a “fundamental disagreement” over the kingdom’s ownership of Greenland, which wasn’t resolved during the meeting, a Danish official said.
