全球市场早报|美股三大指数全线收涨,芯片股活跃,中概股多数上涨
Sou Hu Cai Jing·2025-11-21 23:33

Market Performance - The three major U.S. stock indices closed higher on Friday, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average rising by 1.08% to 46,245.41 points, the S&P 500 increasing by 0.98% to 6,602.99 points, and the Nasdaq gaining 0.88% to 22,273.08 points [1] - For the week, the Dow fell by 1.91%, the S&P 500 dropped by 1.95%, and the Nasdaq decreased by 2.74% [1] Sector Performance - Large technology stocks mostly rose, with the U.S. Technology Seven Index increasing by 0.71%. Notable individual stock movements included Google up over 3%, Apple nearly 2%, and Amazon over 1%, while Tesla and Microsoft fell over 1% [1] - Airline stocks collectively rose, with American Airlines up over 5%, Delta Airlines over 4%, and Southwest Airlines over 5% [1] - Semiconductor stocks mostly increased, with the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index rising by 0.86%. Texas Instruments, NXP Semiconductors, and Microchip Technology all rose over 3% [1] Chinese Stocks - Chinese stocks mostly rose, with the Nasdaq Golden Dragon China Index increasing by 1.23% and the Wind Chinese Technology Leaders Index up by 1.08%. Notable gainers included Tuya Smart up over 6% and Artis Solar up over 5% [1] - However, some individual stocks like iQIYI fell over 2%, and XPeng dropped over 1% [1] Commodity Market - International precious metals futures closed mixed, with COMEX gold futures rising by 0.07% to $4,062.8 per ounce, while COMEX silver futures fell by 1.27% to $49.66 per ounce [2] - For the week, gold futures accumulated a decline of 0.77%, and silver futures dropped by 2.02% [2] Federal Reserve Signals - Recent signals from Federal Reserve officials indicate a divergence in monetary policy views. Vice Chair Jefferson emphasized the resilience of the current financial system, contrasting the AI boom with the internet bubble, noting that companies have actual earnings and limited leverage [2] - Conversely, Fed Governor Milan indicated that data trends are "clearly dovish," suggesting potential support for interest rate cuts due to weaker-than-expected labor market data [2]