Mega-Caps Steady the Tape as Dow Slips Gold Tops $4,000, Oil Holds Near $61

Written byAdam Shapiro
Monday, Nov 3, 2025 4:14 pm ET1min read

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Stocks finished mixed on Monday as large-cap growth helped offset weakness in smaller shares. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 226 points, or 0.48%, to 47,336.7, while the S&P 500 edged up 0.17% to 6,851.97 and the Nasdaq Composite gained 0.46% to 23,834.7. Small-caps lagged again, with the Russell 2000 proxy down 0.32% at 245.44.

Today’s pattern dovetailed with October’s “upbeat but uneven” finish: gains continue to

technology and AI-linked names while mid- and small-caps struggle, according to the October market recap in the provided research. Stabilizing Treasury yields and generally dovish Federal Reserve commentary helped rekindle risk appetite last month, but breadth stayed narrow and equal-weight indexes trailed their cap-weighted counterparts.

Sector leadership remained skewed. In October, technology led with a 6.7% surge, followed by health care (+3.7%) and utilities (+2.2%), while materials (–4.4%), communication services (–3%), real estate (–2.9%) and energy (–1.4%) lagged—an alignment consistent with today’s defensive tilt in small-caps even as growth benchmarks advanced.

Under the surface, participation indicators reflect a maturing advance rather than a breakdown: roughly 35–40% of stocks sit above their 20- and 50-day moving averages versus 55–60% above the 200-day, and the Keller Market Model still shows medium- and long-term uptrends across major indexes (with mid-caps flashing a short-term downtrend). In plain English, long-term momentum remains positive, but fewer stocks are carrying the day—leaving the rally dependent on a handful of leaders.

Commodities offered a mixed backdrop. Gold futures settled around $4,024.10, up 0.69% on the day, extending last month’s 3.6% climb, while U.S. crude hovered at $61.06, up 0.13%, after falling 2.4% in October. A stronger dollar in October (+2.3%) tempered some commodity gains, and natural gas remained volatile after a 24.6% monthly jump.

On the corporate front, AI infrastructure remains a central narrative: Amazon Web Services and OpenAI announced a multi-year partnership to deliver large-scale GPU capacity (GB200/GB300 clusters) with deployment targeted before end-2026 and expansion potential into 2027—supporting continued investment in AI workloads that have underpinned mega-cap leadership.

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Adam Shapiro

Adam Shapiro is a three-time Emmy Award–winning content creator, former network news correspondent, and founder of the multimedia production company TALKENOMICS. At AInvest, he created and launched Capital & Power, a video podcast series designed to drive engagement and establish thought leadership, while also producing original live streams, financial articles, and investor-focused video content. Previously, as a correspondent at FOX Business, Shapiro established the network’s Washington, D.C. bureau, reported from the White House, Capitol Hill, and the Federal Reserve, and secured exclusive bipartisan interviews with influential leaders. His reporting helped solidify FOX Business as the most-watched business channel on television. At the same time, his original Talkenomics series drew tens of thousands of viewers per episode through insightful conversations with policymakers, economists, and thought leaders. At Yahoo Finance, he played a critical leadership role in expanding digital programming to eight hours of live, bell-to-bell financial news coverage, dramatically increasing traffic from 68M to 104M unique monthly visitors and growing ad revenue from zero to over $50 million annually. Yahoo Finance continues to benefit from the credibility of Shapiro’s exclusive interviews with former President Donald Trump and numerous Fortune 500 CEOs.

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