新高!昨夜,欧美股市全线上涨!
Zheng Quan Shi Bao·2026-01-10 00:40

Market Performance - The Dow Jones Industrial Average and S&P 500 Index reached new all-time closing highs, with the Dow up 0.48% to 49,504.07 points and the S&P 500 up 0.65% to 6,966.28 points [1][2] - For the week, the Dow increased by 2.32%, the S&P 500 by 1.57%, and the Nasdaq by 1.88% [1] European Market - Major European indices also closed higher, with Germany's DAX up 0.53% to 25,261.64 points, France's CAC40 up 1.44% to 8,362.09 points, and the UK's FTSE 100 up 0.8% to 10,124.6 points [2][3] - Weekly gains for European indices included DAX up 2.94%, CAC40 up 2.04%, and FTSE 100 up 1.74% [2] Chinese Stocks - The Nasdaq Golden Dragon China Index fell by 1.3%, with notable declines in stocks such as Atour down over 5% and Huya down over 4% [3] - Conversely, stocks like BrainCo surged over 10%, and BeiGene rose over 5% [3] Technology and Semiconductor Sector - Major tech stocks generally rose, with Tesla up over 2% and Facebook up over 1% [4] - The Philadelphia Semiconductor Index increased by 2.73%, with Intel rising over 10% and Lam Research up over 8% [4] - Storage concept stocks saw significant gains, with SanDisk up over 12% and Micron Technology up over 5% [4] - A report from Nomura Securities indicated that enterprise-level SSD NAND prices could increase by over 100% quarter-on-quarter due to strong demand driven by AI [4] Oil and Precious Metals - International oil prices rose, with WTI crude up 2.35% to $59.12 per barrel and Brent crude up 2.18% to $63.34 per barrel [5] - Precious metals also saw gains, with COMEX gold futures up 1.29% to $4,518.40 per ounce and silver up 6.18% to $79.79 per ounce [5] Employment Data and Federal Reserve Outlook - U.S. non-farm payrolls showed a stable labor market, with a total increase of 58,400 jobs in 2025, but a monthly average of 4,900 jobs was significantly lower than the previous year's average [5][6] - Major institutions like Goldman Sachs expect the Federal Reserve to maintain its current policy stance in January 2026, with potential rate cuts delayed until mid-year [6]