Overview:
The S&P 500 rose 0.87% to 5,712 on Monday, May 4, led by a 1.14% surge in the Nasdaq Composite to 18,344 as Apple and Nvidia provided the bulk of index-level lift. The Dow Jones Industrial Average added 0.61% to 41,887, while the Russell 2000 trailed with a modest 0.23% gain, signaling that risk appetite remains concentrated rather than broad. After the close, Palantir beat Q1 EPS estimates by 18% and rose 6.2% in after-hours trading, while Tyson Foods missed and fell 4.1%.
NEW YORK — The S&P 500 posted its third consecutive gain Monday, closing up 0.87% at 5,712 — but the engine pulling the index was far narrower than the headline number suggests.
What Drove the Tape From Bell to Bell
Monday’s session opened on a quiet but constructive note, with futures pointing modestly higher ahead of the open as traders returned from what had been a choppy April close. The first hour saw measured buying in semiconductor names — Nvidia led the early charge, rising more than 2.3% by 10:30 a.m. ET — and that set the tone for the session. Apple added 1.6% through the afternoon on no fresh fundamental catalyst, which itself tells you something about positioning: funds appear to be rebuilding exposure into large-cap names that had been pared back during April’s volatility.
There were no major U.S. economic data releases Monday, which meant the tape was largely at the mercy of technicals and flows. Volume came in below the 30-day average on the NYSE — a detail that should temper enthusiasm. Rallies on light volume can persist, but they tend to be tested harder when volume returns. The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed at 41,887, up 0.61%, while the Russell 2000 added just 0.23% to 2,088, a gap that is worth taking seriously given that small-caps typically outperform when genuine risk appetite is present.
Geopolitically, ongoing U.S.-China trade negotiation signals provided a mild tailwind, though no formal announcement materialized. Traders who have been anticipating a tariff framework update are growing impatient — and that impatience cuts both ways. Any disappointment on that front this week could quickly reverse the goodwill the market has banked across three sessions. For additional context on how the market has been navigating macro uncertainty, see our earlier analysis: Can April’s 10% Rally Survive a Core Inflation Surprise?
The Sectors That Told the Real Story
Technology led all eleven S&P 500 sectors with a gain of 1.82%, driven by semiconductors and software. Communication Services added 1.41% — Alphabet and Meta both gained between 1.2% and 1.5% — while Consumer Discretionary rose 0.93% on Amazon strength. Beyond those three, conviction faded fast. Industrials managed a 0.44% advance and Financials added a pedestrian 0.31% as 10-year Treasury yields held steady near 4.41%, leaving bank net-interest-margin stories in limbo.
The losing side of the ledger was populated by the classic defensives. Consumer Staples fell 0.88%, the worst performer on the day, as rotation out of safety trades accelerated modestly. Real Estate dropped 0.71% and Utilities shed 0.47% — both sectors sensitive to rate expectations, and both signaling that the bond market is not yet giving equities the gift of a meaningful yield decline. Materials fell 0.55% as copper prices softened slightly on mixed Chinese demand signals.
Energy’s 0.28% decline deserves specific attention. Crude oil was essentially flat on the day at around $71.40 per barrel for WTI, but energy equities underperformed even that flat tape — a sign that sector-specific sentiment remains cautious. Anyone tracking oil’s recent volatility will recall that geopolitical supply disruptions can move this sector violently and without warning. The relative underperformance Monday may simply reflect that traders are unwilling to chase energy ahead of OPEC-related headlines expected later this week.
After the Bell: Earnings That Move the Overnight Tape
Palantir Technologies delivered the headline after-hours result, posting Q1 2026 EPS of $0.13 against a consensus estimate of $0.11 — an 18% beat. Revenue came in at $884 million versus the $851 million expected, and the company raised full-year guidance. Shares surged 6.2% in after-hours trading to approximately $31.80. Government AI contract momentum was cited as the primary driver, and management commentary on commercial revenue acceleration will be scrutinized closely when the earnings call transcript hits. For context on whether AI-driven valuations can sustain this kind of earnings premium, see Is Meta’s $145 Billion AI Bet Already Priced for Failure?
Not every report pleased. Tyson Foods missed Q2 estimates on both the top and bottom lines — EPS came in at $0.62 versus the $0.79 consensus, and management flagged ongoing input cost pressure in its beef segment. Shares fell 4.1% after hours to $54.20. Tyson has now missed EPS estimates in two of the last three quarters, and the stock has been a persistent laggard in the Consumer Staples space. Clorox fell 2.7% after reporting in-line revenue but weaker-than-expected margin guidance, citing elevated raw material costs. NXP Semiconductors dropped 1.4% despite a modest EPS beat as automotive-end-market commentary disappointed — a signal worth watching for broader chip-sector read-through given NXP’s exposure to the auto cycle. Diamondback Energy gained 2.8% after hours after beating on free cash flow and announcing an incremental share buyback authorization.
What Monday’s Close Sets Up for Tuesday
The S&P 500 closed at 5,712. The immediate technical resistance sits near 5,740, which corresponds to the index’s early April high before the tariff-driven selloff. A clean break above that level on improving volume would be a meaningful signal — it would confirm that the three-day recovery has structural support rather than being purely a short-covering event. Below 5,680, however, the picture deteriorates quickly, and the 50-day moving average near 5,590 becomes the next logical test.
Tuesday’s economic calendar is thin but not empty. The ISM Services PMI for April prints at 10:00 a.m. ET, with consensus at 51.8. A reading below 50 — contraction territory — would immediately complicate the soft-landing narrative that has been quietly re-emerging in sell-side commentary. Fed speakers are scheduled: Fed Governor Waller speaks at 1:00 p.m. ET, and any language that pushes back against near-term rate cut expectations could pressure rate-sensitive equities that have been quietly recovering. The Fed’s next meeting is May 19-20, and the implied probability of a cut at that meeting currently sits below 15%.
Palantir’s after-hours beat will likely provide a modest positive read-across for AI-adjacent names at Tuesday’s open — but traders should be careful not to over-extrapolate. Palantir’s government revenue base is structurally different from commercial software peers, and its valuation multiple already embeds a great deal of future growth. The question is whether the beat resets expectations for the broader AI software cohort or merely confirms what was already priced in for the specific name. The broader question of whether Big Tech earnings can justify current valuation multiples remains very much open.
| Level / Event | Value | Signal |
|---|---|---|
| S&P 500 resistance | 5,740 | Early April high — clean close above on volume confirms the recovery; failure here stalls momentum |
| S&P 500 support | 5,680 | Monday’s intraday low — a break below this Tuesday reverses the short-term bullish read |
| ISM Services PMI | Tue 10:00 ET | Consensus 51.8; below 50 would challenge the soft-landing narrative and pressure rate-sensitive names |
| Fed Gov. Waller speech | Tue 1:00 PM ET | Any hawkish tilt on near-term cuts could reprice the short end and hit growth-stock multiples |
| 10-Year Treasury yield | 4.41% | Holding steady — a move above 4.52% would likely renew pressure on high-multiple tech names |
Monday’s session gave bulls what they needed: a third consecutive up day and a Palantir print that keeps the AI earnings narrative intact heading into a week where that narrative will face further tests. What it did not give them was the broad participation that would make this rally genuinely convincing. Until the Russell 2000, defensives, and equal-weight indices confirm what the cap-weighted S&P 500 is pricing, the most honest description of this tape is one word: tentative.
This article is published by PreMarket Daily for informational purposes only. Nothing here constitutes financial advice, investment recommendations, or an offer to buy or sell any securities. Always consult a qualified financial professional before making investment decisions.

