美股三连阳,中概股普涨,阿特斯太阳能涨近11%,金银再创新高

Market Performance - US stock market opened higher on December 22, with all three major indices rising for three consecutive days. The S&P 500 index increased by 0.64%, the Nasdaq by 0.52%, and the Dow Jones by 0.47% [1] - Major technology stocks showed mixed performance, with the Tech Giants Index rising by 0.41%. Tesla and Nvidia rose over 1%, while Apple fell more than 1% [1] Sector Performance - Chip stocks mostly rose, with Micron Technology increasing over 4% and Microchip Technology up over 2%. Intel, however, fell over 1% [2] - Bank stocks saw a broad increase, with JPMorgan rising nearly 2%, Goldman Sachs up 0.6%, and Citigroup climbing over 2%, reaching a 17-year high [2] Tesla Developments - Tesla's stock rose over 1%, reaching an intraday high of over 3%, approaching the $500 mark. This surge is partly attributed to CEO Elon Musk's significant legal victory regarding his 2018 compensation plan, valued at $56 billion [2] Chinese Stocks - The Nasdaq Golden Dragon China Index rose by 0.58%, marking three consecutive days of gains. Notable Chinese stocks included Canadian Solar rising nearly 11% and Alibaba increasing by nearly 1% [2] - Analysts from Goldman Sachs predict a 14% growth in Chinese corporate earnings by 2026, which may boost the Chinese stock market [2] Commodity Prices - International oil prices saw an increase, with light crude oil futures for February 2026 rising by 2.64% to $58.01 per barrel, and Brent crude oil futures up 2.65% to $62.07 per barrel [3] - Gold prices reached a historical high of $4,449.18 per ounce, with COMEX gold futures rising by 2.16% to $4,482.30 per ounce. Silver also saw significant gains [3] Gold Market Outlook - Wall Street analysts maintain an optimistic outlook for gold prices, with projections suggesting a rise to $4,900 per ounce next year. The current price of $4,400 per ounce is viewed as a potential midpoint in a super cycle [4] - The likelihood of a Federal Reserve rate cut in January 2024 is estimated at 19.9%, with an 80.1% chance of maintaining current rates [4]