The Dow Jones Industrial Average climbed 8.9% in the first half to top 53,000 for the first time, its best start since 2021, as easing Middle East conflict widened the rally beyond mega-cap technology stocks.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average climbed 8.9% in the first half to top 53,000 for the first time, its best start since 2021, as easing Middle East conflict widened the rally beyond mega-cap technology stocks.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average climbed 8.9% in the first half to top 53,000 for the first time, its best start since 2021, as easing Middle East conflict widened the rally beyond mega-cap technology stocks.
The Dow climbed 8.9% in H1 to top 53,000, its best start since 2021, as Middle East conflict eased and broadened the rally.
"We do not view this as a moment to aggressively add risk," said Michelle Gibley and Chris Ferrarone, strategists at Schwab, who argued the rally came mostly from traders unwinding bearish bets rather than genuine peace.
Financials led the advance, with the sector up more than 8% over the past month, followed by energy shares that surged over 3% on July 7 alone after the US revoked Iran's license to sell crude. The S&P 500 Energy Sector's earnings are expected to more than double year-over-year, while tech sector earnings may increase more than 60%, fueled by an AI-driven memory shortage. The Dow's composition — 27% financials, 18% industrials — benefited from a steepening yield curve and strong capital markets activity.
The question now is whether the broadening trade can survive a hawkish Federal Reserve and fading liquidity. The Dow has historically generated an average return of about 4% during midterm election years, compared with roughly 10% in pre-election years, according to Stock Trader's Almanac data. With the 10-year Treasury yield at 4.54% and oil prices volatile after the ceasefire collapse, the second half may test whether the rally has legs beyond the AI trade.
The first half saw a meaningful shift in market leadership. Financials, which trade at a forward price-to-earnings multiple of 11.83 versus the S&P 500's 18.67, have benefited from a steepening yield curve and strong deal activity driven by mega IPOs. Bank earnings are expected to grow nearly 20% in the second quarter, according to Wells Fargo bank analyst Mike Mayo, who called it a "multi-year EPS inflection."
Energy stocks have been the other standout. Brent crude climbed more than 6% to $79 per barrel after the US-Iran ceasefire collapsed in late June, and the S&P 500 Energy Sector rose more than 3% on July 7 as the Treasury Department revoked Iran's license to sell crude. Occidental Petroleum, Devon Energy, and APA each gained between 5% and 6% that day.
The Federal Reserve's next moves will be critical. The 10-year Treasury yield rose nearly 7 basis points to 4.54% on July 7, reflecting expectations that rates will stay higher for longer. Weak June jobs data had briefly fueled hopes of a dovish pivot, but the renewed Iran conflict and oil price spike have complicated the inflation outlook.
Schwab's scenario analysis keeps Brent between $75 and $100 in its moderate case, with no major correction. Its adverse case puts crude at $100 to $125, bringing deeper equity corrections and stagnation risk across Europe and Asia. A severe outcome above $125 implies a global recession and a bear market, a fall of 20% or more in stocks.
The Dow's lower exposure to high-growth AI stocks — compared with the S&P 500's 40% technology weighting and the Nasdaq-100's 55% — has helped cushion the index from sharp valuation swings. But it also means the Dow is less likely to outperform if the Fed pivots dovish and tech resumes its leadership.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.