The stock and crypto markets are surging together. Two major U.S. indices recently hit new all-time highs. Korea’s market followed the same upward trajectory as the U.S. stock rally. Companies like Samsung drove this growth.
Individual stocks drove the rally as retail demand rose to a new peak in two years. Here is how this trajectory unfolded, leading to the peaks of the S&P 500 and Nasdaq indices.
The S&P 500 and Nasdaq hit new ATHs of 7,400 and 29,000 points after a six-week capital inflow. This surge followed the addition of $10 trillion in capital during this period. The global demand for AI infrastructure was the driving force behind it.
The S&P 500 and Nasdaq rose by 17% and 27%, respectively, since the bottoms formed on March 30. This was regarded as one of the strongest reversals in the history of the U.S. stock market.
It’s worth noting that this was happening even before the peace deal was signed. The financial markets had been crashing since the onset of U.S.-Iran attacks due to tensions over a third world war.
S&P 500 Index vs. Nasdaq data | Source: Ash Crypto/X
With equities now rallying, the same could be anticipated for the crypto markets, especially Bitcoin (BTC). Bitcoin historically catches up to equity peaks. Different market phases decouple this correlation. With such a rally in place, were retailers involved in this capital injection?
Retail interest in the AI narrative that led to the S&P 500 and Nasdaq pumping was seen in the tech stocks’ capital inflow.
As per J.P. Morgan’s research team, retailers poured over $1.10 billion in the past week. This was the second-largest purchase on record. It was also the fifth consecutive week of positive inflow since the equities market rebound at the end of March.
Such figures indicated real retail demand for Amazon, Nvidia, Dell, Samsung, and Apple, among other stocks.
Retail investor weekly purchases | Source: The Kobeissi Letter/X
The only other week that was higher than the aforementioned week was the one ending on September 20th, 2020. It was higher by about $200 million with a reading of more than $1.30 billion.
Such records showed that euphoric sentiment was driving the U.S. stock market. The same zeal was reflected in other jurisdictions like Korea.
Among the stocks that US investors demanded were those tracked by the S&P 500 and Nasdaq indices. The lot included Apple, SanDisk, Dell, Super Micro Computer, and others.
The best-performing stock in the Nasdaq index was SanDisk, which returned over 3,731% in the past year. Hence, it surpassed Qualcomm’s record of 2,620% in 1999. SanDisk’s gains became the strongest annual return of the entire Dot-Com Bubble era.
Notably, SanDisk was a tech hardware stock. It suggested they were doing better than their counterparts in the software, services, and digital infrastructure.
U.S. stock market performance | Source: X
Worth noting, in terms of daily aggregate notional flow on Nasdaq, Micron Technology led, followed by Apple. Together they outpaced Nvidia, AMD, and Microsoft. Most of the stocks were closing the day in green, suggesting a collective rebound.
In summary, High demand for tech stocks drove the S&P 500 and Nasdaq to new record highs. This rally centered on an intense global appetite for AI chips.
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