
NASDAQ fell nearly 1%, small-cap stock indices rose by over 1%, NVIDIA initially fell by about 7% before rebounding, while silver saw the deepest decline of 5%

The U.S. stock market showed differentiation, with the Nasdaq and S&P 500 falling, while the Dow and small-cap stocks rose. Investors sold off technology stocks and turned to buying blue-chip stocks and small-cap stocks. The Nasdaq fell for three consecutive days, with both the S&P Nasdaq and Nasdaq 100 declining, while the Russell 2000 Index rose. NVIDIA's stock price fell by about 7% before rebounding briefly, with silver seeing the deepest decline of 5%. In addition, the European stocks of the French luxury goods giant Kering Group also hit a seven-year low. Offshore renminbi surged more than 600 points on Thursday and rose over 0.7% in three days
US Stock Market Trends Diverge, Small-Cap Stocks and Blue-Chip Stocks Rise, Tech Stocks Continue to Fall
On Thursday, July 25th, the US stock indices showed divergent performance, with investors continuing to sell off tech stocks and instead buying blue-chip and small-cap stocks.
At the opening, the Nasdaq and S&P 500 indices quickly fell to refresh daily lows, with the Nasdaq dropping nearly 1.8% and the S&P falling nearly 0.7%. However, following other stock indices, they rebounded to refresh daily highs at midday, with major US indices briefly turning all green. However, towards the closing, all indices began to decline again, accelerating towards the daily lows at the close.
At the close, only the Dow Jones and small-cap indices closed higher, while the Nasdaq, Nasdaq 100, and S&P broad market closed lower:
The S&P 500 index fell by 27.91 points, a decrease of 0.51%, closing at 5399.22 points. The Dow Jones rose by 81.20 points, an increase of 0.20%, closing at 39935.07 points. The Nasdaq fell by 160.69 points, a decrease of 0.93%, closing at 17181.72 points.
The Nasdaq 100 fell by 1.06%; the Nasdaq Technology Market Cap Weighted Index (NDXTMC), which measures the performance of Nasdaq 100 technology sector components, fell by 1.63%; the Russell 2000 index rose by 1.26%; the VIX fear index rose by 2.33% to 18.46.
In the past 12 days, the Nasdaq has underperformed the Russell 2000 index for 11 days, erasing the outstanding performance of large tech indices so far this year. Most of the 11 sectors of the S&P 500 index closed lower, with the telecommunications sector down by 1.86%, the information technology/tech sector down by 1.14%, the consumer discretionary sector down by 0.42%, the financial sector up by about 0.3%, the industrial sector up by 0.76%, and the energy sector up by 1.47%.
The "Tech Seven Sisters" all fell except for Tesla. Tesla closed up by 1.97%, following a 12.33% plunge the previous day.
Tech stocks dragged down European stock markets, falling for two consecutive days:
Chip stocks like STMicroelectronics dragged down the STOXX 600 index, with the pan-European Stoxx 600 index falling by 0.72% to 508.63 points. The Eurozone STOXX 50 index fell by 1.04% to 4811.28 points.
The German DAX 30 index fell by 0.48%. The French CAC 40 index fell by 1.15%. The Italian FTSE MIB index fell by 2.03%. The UK FTSE 100 index rose by 0.40%. The Dutch AEX index fell by 0.54%. The Spanish IBEX 35 index fell by 0.58%.
 reported that US EIA natural gas inventories increased by 22 billion cubic feet last week, a weekly increase of 0.69% (compared to 0.31% growth last week).
Investors took profits, spot gold and silver plummeted, gold fell to a two-week low, and silver fell by 5% during trading
COMEX gold futures for August fell 2.21% to $2362.4 per ounce at the close, while COMEX silver futures for September fell 4.51% to $27.995 per ounce.
Spot gold continued its earlier decline during the day, with US stocks hitting a daily low of over 1.8% at midday, falling below the $2360 per ounce mark, bidding farewell to last week's historical high of $2483.60 per ounce; spot silver weakened all the way, hitting a daily low before the US stock market announced the actual GDP for the second quarter of the United States, with a drop of over 5% pushing below the $27 per ounce integer mark.
Analysis points out that gold and silver have been in a significant uptrend recently, therefore, long liquidation and profit-taking from recent gains have intensified selling pressure.
Gold plunges, not breaking below the $2350 per ounce support level
London industrial base metals have been declining for several days in a row. The economic barometer "Dr. Copper" closed up $18 at $9122 per ton, ending an eight-day decline, bidding farewell to the lowest level in over three months, having fallen below $9000 per ton during the day, the first time since early April.
London aluminum fell $30, a decline of over 1.30%, to $2270 per ton. London zinc fell $4 to $2681 per ton. London lead fell $16 to $2028 per ton. London nickel fell $58 to $15769 per ton. London tin fell $374, a drop of over 1.25%, to $29416 per ton.
Some analysts point out that if Trump is re-elected, it will be bearish for copper, aluminum, and other non-ferrous metal varieties. One of the important themes in the non-ferrous metal sector is the strong driving force of demand for green energy and transportation, and the attitudes of the Trump and Biden administrations towards green energy are completely different. If Trump is re-elected, there will be great uncertainty in the consumption of non-ferrous metals for green energy, which will be bearish for copper, aluminum, and other non-ferrous metal varieties