DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

Most of Wall Street drifts as defense companies rally

January 8, 2026
in News
Most of Wall Street drifts as defense companies rally

Modest moves for Wall Street overall masked some big swings underneath the surface on Thursday, including for makers of weapons and other military equipment after President Trump said he wants to increase spending on them sharply.

The S&P 500 barely budged and inched up by less than 0.1%, coming off its first loss in four days. It remains near its all-time high set earlier this week. The Dow Jones industrial average rose 270 points, or 0.6%, and the Nasdaq composite fell 0.4%.

The majority of stocks climbed as yields ticked higher in the bond market after mixed reports on the U.S. economy.

The number of U.S. workers applying for unemployment benefits rose last week, a potential indicator of increasing layoffs, but by no more than economists expected. Other reports said U.S. workers improved their productivity by more in the summer than economists expected, while the U.S. trade deficit unexpectedly shrank in October.

On Wall Street, defense-industry companies rallied after Trump said he wants to increase U.S. military spending to $1.5 trillion in 2027 from $901 billion in order to build the “Dream Military.”

L3Harris Technologies jumped 5.2%, Lockheed Martin climbed 4.3% and Northrop Grumman added 2.4%. They bounced back from losses the previous day, when Trump complained defense contractors were making military equipment too slowly.

RTX came under particular criticism by Trump, and its stock lagged behind rivals. It inched up 0.8% after Trump said that it was the “slowest in increasing their volume.”

Trump signed an executive order Wednesday calling on the Pentagon to ensure future contracts with contractors contain a provision prohibiting their ability to buy back their own stock during a period of underperformance on U.S. government contracts.

Another winner on Wall Street was Constellation Brands, which climbed 5.3% after the beer and wine company reported a better profit for the latest quarter than analysts expected.

They helped work against drops for several technology stocks that held back the overall market. Nvidia was the heaviest weight on the S&P 500 after dropping 2.2% and giving back some of its big gain of nearly 40% last year.

All told, the S&P 500 added 0.53 to 6,921.46 points. The Dow Jones added 270.03 to 49,266.11, and the Nasdaq fell 104.26 to 23,480.02.

Elsewhere, oil prices jumped to continue their zigzags since Trump ousted the leader of Venezuela last weekend.

A barrel of benchmark U.S. crude climbed 3.2% to $57.76. Brent crude, the international standard, rose 3.4% to settle at $61.99 per barrel.

Venezuela is potentially sitting on more oil than any other country in the world, and any increase in production could push further downward on prices, which have already fallen on expectations for plentiful supplies. But billions of dollars of investment are likely necessary to get Venezuela’s aging infrastructure in good enough shape to ramp up production sharply.

It’s not just Venezuela where the U.S. military could see action, as Trump talks about “troubled and dangerous times.” The president in recent days has also called for taking over the Danish territory of Greenland for national security reasons and has suggested he’s open to carrying out military operations in Colombia.

In stock markets abroad, indexes moved modestly in Europe after a weak finish in Asia.

Japan’s Nikkei 225 dropped 1.6% for one of the world’s bigger moves, while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng fell 1.2%.

In the bond market, the yield on the 10-year Treasury rose to 4.18% from 4.15% late Wednesday.

Choe writes for the Associated Press.

The post Most of Wall Street drifts as defense companies rally appeared first on Los Angeles Times.

Netflix Greenlights ‘I Suck at Girls’ Comedy Series From Justin Halpern, Patrick Schumacker and Bill Lawrence
News

Netflix Greenlights ‘I Suck at Girls’ Comedy Series From Justin Halpern, Patrick Schumacker and Bill Lawrence

by TheWrap
January 10, 2026

Netflix has given the greenlight to comedy series “I Suck at Girls,” which hails from “Abbott Elementary” co-showrunners Justin Halpern ...

Read more
News

Geraldo Rivera Sides With Protesters After New ICE Shooting Footage: ‘I Love Cops, but They Sometimes F–k Up’

January 10, 2026
News

‘An Honesty problem’: Analyst says DHS credibility sunk by ‘remarkable rate’ of falsehoods

January 10, 2026
News

Two men shot inside NYC deli — as gunman remains at large, with $5K bounty offered

January 10, 2026
News

Cheeky Hailey Bieber wears nothing but bed sheets in racy new photo shoot

January 10, 2026
‘Godzilla Minus Zero’ Gets November US Theatrical Release

‘Godzilla Minus Zero’ Gets November US Theatrical Release

January 10, 2026
Tom Cherones, Emmy-Winning ‘Seinfeld’ Director, Dies at 86

Tom Cherones, Emmy-Winning ‘Seinfeld’ Director, Dies at 86

January 10, 2026
Dr. Oz touts federal crackdown on healthcare fraud by ‘foreign influences’ in L.A.

Dr. Oz touts federal crackdown on healthcare fraud by ‘foreign influences’ in L.A.

January 10, 2026

DNYUZ © 2025

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2025