Stocks climb on hopes for lower interest rates as Dow rallies 660 points
[November 26, 2025] By
STAN CHOE
NEW YORK (AP) — The U.S. stock market climbed again Tuesday on hopes for
a coming cut to interest rates.
The S&P 500 rose 0.9% after breaking out of a morning lull and is back
within 1.8% of its all-time high. The Dow Jones Industrial Average
rallied 664 points, or 1.4%, and the Nasdaq composite gained 0.7%.
Stocks got a boost from easing yields in the bond market. Lower interest
rates can cover up many sins in financial markets, including prices
going too high, and hopes are strong that the Federal Reserve will cut
its main interest rate at its next meeting to juice the economy further.
A raft of mixed economic data on Tuesday left traders betting on a
nearly 83% probability that the Fed will cut in December, according to
data from CME Group. That’s roughly the same as a day before and up
sharply from the coin flip’s chance that they saw just a week ago.
One of Tuesday’s reports said that shoppers bought less at U.S.
retailers in September than economists expected. Another said confidence
among U.S. consumers worsened by more in November than expected, a
second signal that the economy could potentially use the help of lower
interest rates.
Easier rates can boost the economy by encouraging households and
companies to borrow more and investors to pay higher prices for
investments than they would otherwise.

A third report, meanwhile, said inflation at the wholesale level was a
touch worse in September than economists expected, but a closely tracked
underlying trend was slightly better. That’s important because lower
interest rates can make inflation worse, and high inflation is the main
deterrent that could keep the Fed from cutting rates.
After taking all the data together, economists suggested the Fed and its
chair, Jerome Powell, could be leaning toward cutting rates on Dec. 10.
The Fed has already cut rates twice this year in hopes of shoring up the
slowing job market.
“Taking a pause on rate cuts would probably do more damage to sentiment
than a cut would help,” according to Brian Jacobsen, chief economist at
Annex Wealth Management, who also said “Powell doesn’t need to be the
Grinch that stole Christmas.”
Easier interest rates can give particularly big boosts to smaller
companies, because many of them need to borrow to grow. The Russell 2000
index of the smallest U.S. stocks jumped 2.1% to lead the market.
Elsewhere on Wall Street, several retailers leaped after delivering
stronger profits for the summer than analysts expected.
Abercrombie & Fitch soared 37.5% after the apparel seller reported a
better profit than expected. It also raised the bottom end of its
forecasted range for revenue and profit over the full year.
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Traders Fred Demarco, left, and Edward McCarthy work on the floor of
the New York Stock Exchange, Monday, Nov. 24, 2025. (AP
Photo/Richard Drew)
 Kohl’s surged 42.5% after reporting
a profit for the latest quarter, when analysts were expecting a
loss. Best Buy rose 5.3% after boosting its profit forecast for the
full year following a better-than-expected third quarter, citing
strength across computing, gaming and mobile phones.
Dick’s Sporting Goods erased an early drop of 4% to add 0.2%. It
raised its forecast for results at its Dick’s stores, though its
purchase of Foot Locker is requiring some work. Executive Chairman
Ed Stack said the company is “cleaning out the garage” at Foot
Locker by clearing inventory, closing poorly performing stores and
making other moves.
Swings also continued in the artificial-intelligence industry, which
has battled concerns that too many dollars are pouring into data
centers and may not produce the revolution of bigger profits and
productivity that proponents are predicting.
Alphabet rose another 1.5%, continuing a strong run on excitement
about its recently released Gemini AI model. Chinese giant Alibaba,
meanwhile, saw its stock that trades in the United States fall 2.3%
after losing an early gain. It reported stronger revenue than
analysts expected for the latest quarter thanks in part to the AI
boom, but its overall profit fell short of forecasts.
Some chip companies dropped sharply following a report from The
Information that Meta Platforms is in talks to spend billions of
dollars on AI chips from Alphabet instead of them. Nvidia sank 2.6%
and Advanced Micro Devices dropped 4.1%.
All told, the S&P 500 rose 60.76 points to 6,765.88. The Dow Jones
Industrial Average rallied 664.18 to 47,112.45, and the Nasdaq
composite gained 153.59 to 23,025.59.

In the bond market, the yield on the 10-year Treasury eased to 4.00%
from 4.04% late Monday.
In stock markets abroad, indexes rose across Europe and Asia.
Germany’s DAX returned 1%, and stocks in Shanghai climbed 0.9% for
two of the world’s bigger moves.
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AP Business Writer Elaine Kurtenbach contributed.
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