All three major US indexes hit simultaneous closing highs, capping a rally fueled by AI enthusiasm and strong corporate earnings.
For months, the stock market’s biggest indexes have been taking turns at the podium. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq kept printing new highs while the Dow sat in the corner, arms crossed, refusing to participate.
The numbers behind the milestone #
On May 26, the S&P 500 closed at 7,519.12, up 0.61%, and the Nasdaq finished at 26,656.18, a 1.19% gain. The Dow, meanwhile, dropped 118 points to close at 50,461.68, a decline of 0.23%.
The Nasdaq first crossed above the 25,000 level on May 1, closing at 25,114.44. On that same day, the Dow closed lower.
April 2026 was the strongest month for both the S&P 500 and Nasdaq since 2020, with multiple record closes stacking up as corporate earnings exceeded expectations and geopolitical headwinds briefly eased. By mid-April, the S&P 500 had already reached around 7,022.95 during what analysts were characterizing as an ongoing AI-driven rally.
Why the indexes kept diverging #
The Nasdaq is dominated by tech giants, the companies best positioned to monetize artificial intelligence. Memory-chip stocks in particular have been on a tear, riding the wave of enterprise AI adoption. The S&P 500, while broader, still has massive tech weightings that allowed it to draft behind the Nasdaq’s momentum. The Dow, by contrast, is a price-weighted index of just 30 stocks that leans heavily on industrials, financials, and consumer staples.
The drivers behind this year’s rally have been consistent: robust corporate earnings, accelerating AI investment cycles, and optimism around potential shifts in US-Iran diplomatic relations that eased geopolitical risk premiums.
What this means for investors and crypto #
For crypto investors, Bitcoin and major digital assets have shown increasingly tight correlation with equity market risk appetite throughout 2025 and into 2026. A broad-based equity rally, as opposed to a tech-only one, tends to create a more durable risk-on environment where institutional capital flows more freely into alternative assets, including crypto. Through the first half of 2026, a confirmed trading day where all three major US indexes reached new closing highs concurrently remained elusive. Every time the S&P 500 and Nasdaq hit records while the Dow declined, it was a reminder that the market’s strength was concentrated, not distributed.
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