
The Dow Jones Industrial Average erased its early losses and turned positive Tuesday, creating a split tape as blue-chip strength offset pressure from tech and semiconductor stocks.
The reversal came about an hour after the open, with gains in names including IBM, Sherwin-Williams and Microsoft helping the price-weighted index move into positive territory. Caterpillar remained a drag, but the Dow’s structure allowed a handful of large index components to pull the average higher while the broader market stayed weaker.
The move did not mark a clean risk-on rebound across Wall Street. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq remained under pressure as semiconductor and mega-cap technology shares sold off, leaving the Dow as the outlier rather than the leader of a broad-market recovery.
That divergence matters for crypto because Bitcoin and other risk assets often trade with the liquidity mood around technology shares, rates and AI-linked positioning. A Dow bounce driven by defensive or blue-chip names does not carry the same signal as a synchronized rally across the Nasdaq, S&P 500 and crypto market.
The market split follows another volatile session for AI and high-growth equities. Heavy AI spending, debt-funded expansion and stretched post-IPO valuations have been weighing on investor appetite for the most aggressive parts of the market. SpaceX’s recent post-IPO selloff erased roughly $400 billion in market value, while its planned debt push had already sharpened questions around AI spending and balance-sheet pressure.
Tuesday’s Dow reversal shows investors are not selling everything at once. The pressure is more selective, with capital rotating away from crowded tech and chip trades while some blue-chip industrial, software and defensive names find support.
Bitcoin stayed under pressure during the equity split, trading near $62,600 after dropping more than 3% over 24 hours. CoinGecko data placed BTC’s 24-hour range between roughly $62,000 and $64,684, keeping the asset near the lower end of its intraday band.
The Dow’s positive turn gives bulls a short-term relief point, but the broader tape remains uneven. A strong close in the Dow alone would show blue-chip resilience. A recovery in the Nasdaq and S&P 500 would give the reversal more weight for crypto and high-beta risk assets.
The Dow’s recovery is still limited to the blue-chip side of the tape, with the Nasdaq, semiconductor names and Bitcoin lagging behind the move. A stronger risk signal would need the rebound to carry into tech and crypto before the close, not just lift the price-weighted Dow through a handful of large components.
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