Stocks Buoyed by AI Winners, Data as Geopolitical Risks Fade

US stocks extended gains on President Donald Trump’s retreat from tariff threats while traders’ appetite for artificial intelligence bets returned.

The S&P 500 rose 0.7% as of 9:36 a.m. in New York. The Nasdaq 100 gained 0.7% as chipmakers and AI-linked names led market gains. Haven assets including gold and Treasuries fluctuated, signaling caution lurking beneath the surface of the rally.

Sentiment improved after NATO’s secretary general said a breakthrough over Greenland focused on the broader issue of security in the Arctic region, instead of a discussion of the territory’s sovereignty with the US president.

“It’s a rapid fire TACO trade. This one didn’t even last a full two trading days,” said Jay Woods. But the chief market strategist at Freedom Capital Markets fears a boy-that-cried-wolf scenario for the market, where Trump’s threats “become reality and investors get fooled by buying the dip and it doesn’t snap back — especially this quickly.”

JPMorgan Chase & Co. strategists said there’s been little evidence of foreign investors pulling back from US assets despite the flare-up in geopolitical tensions, reinforcing the view that global capital remains anchored to American markets.

Equities also got a boost after data showed the US economy remains resilient. Inflation-adjusted gross domestic product increased at a revised 4.4% annualized rate, the fastest in two years, according to Bureau of Economic Analysis data. Applications for US unemployment benefits were little changed last week, steadying at low levels after a volatile holiday season.

Technology shares drew added support from a resurgence in the AI narrative with chip stocks rallying after upbeat commentary from Nvidia Corp. and reports that Anthropic has more than doubled its revenue run rate since last summer reinforced optimism around sustained AI spending.