10 of 11 Sectors Higher: Why the S&P’s Rally Looks Healthier Than the Headlines Suggest

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By David Beren Published

Quick Read

  • Dell (DELL) surged 17% Friday on Lenovo’s better-than-expected earnings, closing at $295.19, with AI-optimized server revenue of $8.95B in Q4 (up 342% YoY) and FY27 guidance of $140B revenue at midpoint, roughly doubling AI servers to $50B. HP (HPQ) rose 15% Friday to $25.24 on continued momentum in AI PCs following an 11% YoY Personal Systems revenue increase, while Qualcomm (QCOM) gained 12% to $238.16 as it pivoted toward data center custom silicon with initial shipments later this year, though Take-Two Interactive (TTWO) fell 4% to $227.55 despite reaffirming Grand Theft Auto Six’s November 2026 release due to cautious forward guidance.

  • Dell, HP, and Qualcomm are capitalizing on the AI infrastructure and AI PC refresh cycles as corporate earnings begin catching up to elevated valuations, while Take-Two demonstrates investor discrimination between hype-driven pricing and actual execution against guidance.

  • The analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 stocks and Dell Technologies wasn't one of them. Get them here FREE.

10 of 11 Sectors Higher: Why the S&P’s Rally Looks Healthier Than the Headlines Suggest

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The headline performance data rolling across trading desks on Friday afternoon looks almost too clean to be real. The benchmark S&P 500 extended its massive winning streak to eight consecutive weeks as ten of the eleven market sectors finished cleanly in positive territory, with healthcare leading the charge. CNBC’s Julia Boorstin framed it cleanly on Friday’s broadcast: “The S and P posting its eighth straight winning week, that win streak coming despite volatility throughout the week in oil prices and treasury yields.”

The sheer underlying breadth of this market expansion is becoming the real story for institutional investors. Dangerous rallies led exclusively by a handful of over-allocated tech names are notoriously fragile over the long run. Broad participation across consumer cyclicals, defensive value sectors, and technology names within the same week typically precedes further equity continuation rather than an immediate reversal. The fact that this broad market surge occurred with West Texas Intermediate crude oil pushing toward ninety-seven dollars a barrel and the benchmark ten-year Treasury yield holding firm near five percent makes the entire upward trajectory look vastly more impressive to observers.

Breadth, Volatility, and the Macro Backdrop

Implied volatility measures show that the broader options market is cooperating beautifully with this ongoing equity rally. The VIX closed at 16.76 on May 21, down 14% over the past month and well below its 12-month average of 18.2. That structural drop matters because the index peaked above 31 in late March, and sustained institutional de-risking from that elevated level usually signals a powerful, long-term improvement in global market sentiment.

The main underlying counterweight to this bullish momentum is that the University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index dropped sharply to 49.8 in April, well below the traditional 60 recessionary threshold. Equities are aggressively rallying, with regular everyday consumers currently sitting at their gloomiest sentiment level in a full year. That deep ongoing tension between Wall Street and Main Street represents the real systemic risk to monitor moving forward.

Dell Leads the AI Hardware Trade

Boorstin called out the standout move: “A trio of tech stocks, HP, Dell, and Qualcomm, all posting double-digit gains. Dell led the way up 17% following better-than-expected earnings from competitor Lenovo.” Dell Technologies (NYSE:DELL | DELL Price Prediction) finished Friday at $295.19, up 17% on the day and 168% over the past year.

Dell’s Q4 FY26 report in February delivered revenue of $33.38 billion, up 40% year over year, with non-GAAP EPS of $3.89 versus a $3.51 estimate. The real number was AI infrastructure: $8.95 billion in AI-optimized server revenue in Q4 alone, up 342% YoY, with $64 billion in FY26 AI server orders and a $43 billion backlog entering FY27. Management guided FY27 revenue to $140 billion at midpoint, up 23%, with AI servers roughly doubling to $50 billion.

HP’s AI PC Cycle

HP (NYSE:HPQ) closed at $25.24, up 15% Friday and 21% on the week. Q1 FY26 results in February showed Personal Systems revenue of $10.25 billion, up 11% YoY, with Consumer PS up 16%. Interim CEO Bruce Broussard credited “continued momentum in AI PCs”. The Windows 11 refresh cycle is translating into hardware demand.

Qualcomm’s Data Center Pivot

Qualcomm (NASDAQ:QCOM) closed at $238.16, up 12% Friday and 65% over the past year. Handsets dragged Q2 FY26, but Automotive revenue hit a record $1.33 billion, up 38%, while IoT grew 9%. CEO Cristiano Amon flagged the bigger pivot: “We are equally excited by our entry into the data center, where a leading hyperscaler custom silicon engagement is on track for initial shipments later this calendar year.” The June 24 Investor Day on Data Center and Physical AI is the next catalyst.

Take-Two: Where Investors Are Discriminating

The counterpoint mattered as Take-Two Interactive (NASDAQ:TTWO) closed at $227.55, down 4% Friday and 6% on the week. Boorstin noted the setup: “Take-Two Interactive reaffirmed that his blockbuster game, Grand Theft Auto Six, is still on pace to be released in November, but the company also issued cautious guidance that took the stock down 5%.”

FY27 guidance came in workable but uninspiring: Net Bookings of $8.0 to $8.2 billion and GAAP diluted EPS of $0.55 to $0.75. CEO Strauss Zelnick anchored the thesis on the November 19, 2026, launch of Grand Theft Auto VI. Reddit retail showed the split, with wallstreetbets threads explicitly arguing GTA 6 is “already priced in”.

What to Watch Next

The overarching market setup heading into June looks highly constructive but remains entirely conditional on upcoming data. Three major variables to track include whether the benchmark 10-year yield holds safely below its May 19 peak of 4.67%, whether consumer sentiment stabilizes above the April low, and whether massive AI hardware orders successfully convert into forward guidance updates from tech giants. Broad equity rallies tend to persist when actual corporate earnings catch up to price levels. The upcoming quarter will conclusively tell us if they do.

Photo of David Beren
About the Author David Beren →

David Beren has been a Flywheel Publishing contributor since 2022. Writing for 24/7 Wall St. since 2023, David loves to write about topics of all shapes and sizes. As a technology expert, David focuses heavily on consumer electronics brands, automobiles, and general technology. He has previously written for LifeWire, formerly About.com. As a part-time freelance writer, David’s “day job” has been working on and leading social media for multiple Fortune 100 brands. David loves the flexibility of this field and its ability to reach customers exactly where they like to spend their time. Additionally, David previously published his own blog, TmoNews.com, which reached 3 million readers in its first year. In addition to freelance and social media work, David loves to spend time with his family and children and relive the glory days of video game consoles by playing any retro game console he can get his hands on.

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