Wall Street Ends October Higher as Nasdaq Sets the Pace

Written byAdam Shapiro
Friday, Oct 31, 2025 4:04 pm ET2min read

At the closing bell Friday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average added about 41 points (0.09%) to 47,563, the S&P 500 rose roughly 18 (0.26%) to 6,840, and the Nasdaq Composite climbed 144 (0.61%) to 23,725, while the Russell 2000 advanced 0.55% to 246.20. In commodities, December crude traded near $60.90 (up 0.54%) and December gold hovered around $4,009 (down 0.17%).

At the company level, the coming

print looms large after a quarter marked by expanding AIP use cases, new tie-ups with Snowflake and Nvidia, and continued inroads with government buyers—from the UK Armed Forces to a $385 million VA award and a defense deal in Poland, according to a Wedbush research note.

Wedbush’s Daniel Ives framed the stakes starkly: “We continue to believe Palantir has the potential to be a trillion-dollar market cap company in the next few years as the AI Revolution takes hold and AI production continues to ramp up. We maintain our OUTPERFORM rating and $200 price target with the company remaining on the Ives AI 30 list.” The note also argues that street revenue forecasts are “beatable” as commercial demand broadens.

The broader mega-cap backdrop remains constructive. Apple guided to 10%–12% December-quarter revenue growth and 47%–48% gross margins as services hit a record $28.8B, even as tariffs and supply tightness linger. Amazon spotlighted AWS growth and structurally higher operating margins; Alphabet crossed the $100B quarterly revenue mark amid rising AI CapEx; Microsoft delivered double-digit growth while cautioning on Azure capacity; and Meta posted robust top-line gains alongside faster expense growth. Each thread reinforces a common narrative: AI is supporting revenue and margin resilience while forcing capital allocation trade-offs across the group.

In ETFs, Brian Potts, a lawyer at Husch Blackwell, sketched a different kind of core exposure with DEMZ, which

on multi-cycle donation data to Democrats and seeks to hew to sector weights. “We are a retirement asset for Democrats. So we are an SPY or a VOO alternative…[the fund] is designed to track the market as closely as possible using only the companies who have contributed more to Democrats,” he told AInvest. He also described the fund succinctly as “the S&P without the GOP.” While questions persist about tech concentration, Potts said any tilt reflects market moves between rebalances and emphasized the strategy’s rules-based design. Potts created the website to help anyone, investors, voters, Democrats, Republicans, track where companies are sending their political donations.

For investors, the near-term setup ties together earnings catalysts and factor exposures. If AI spending and commercial adoption keep outpacing capacity constraints, leaders could extend their advantage; otherwise, the market may refocus on balance-sheet discipline and policy-sensitive costs such as tariffs. Either way, the coming Palantir update and the continued evolution of values-based core ETFs will test whether 2025’s AI narrative still has room to run—or merely needs a new chapter.

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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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