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Happy Thursday. This is TheStreet’s Stock Market Today for Jan. 22, 2026. You can follow the latest updates on the market here in our daily live blog.

Update: 4:15 p.m. ET

Intel Posts Disappointing Quarterly Forecast

Since the U.S. government lined up an investment in beleaguered chipmaker Intel, the company’s stock has been a rocket ship. Today, that narrative seems to be coming off the rails — and it has supply woes to blame.

Intel reported a disappointing forecast for the coming quarter as its new factories struggle to deliver quality manufacturing yields, which takes a hammer to the company’s comeback ambitions at a time during which demand has been strong across the compute ecosystem.

To get back on track, Intel will need to improve its yield significantly to meet demand. However, that issue might take longer than a quarter as the company continues to scale up its new foundry business and impact the market.

The news sent shares of the chipmaker plummeting 6.38% in after hours, falling to $50.85. Before the earnings call, the company registered a 52-week high at $54.60.

Update: 4:00 p.m. ET

Closing Bell

That’ll be it for today. The U.S. markets are now closed.

The Nasdaq (+0.91%) led the pack as U.S. stocks rallied once more on Thursday, finishing out the day at 23,436.02.

The Russell 2000 (+0.76%), Dow (+0.63%), and S&P 500(+0.55%) climbed concurrently, extending yesterday’s rebound trade. They capped off their day at 2,718.77, 49,384.01, and 6,913.35.

The Cboe Volatility Index (-7.22%) also extended recent losses, falling to 15.68.

This section is being updated. Check back soon for updates.

Update: 2:15 p.m. ET

Midday Update

Heading towards the end of the day, here are how the major U.S. equity benchmarks are holding up:

  • Nasdaq: +1.11%
  • Russell 2000: +1.03%
  • Dow: +0.89%
  • S&P 500: +0.76%

Through midday, 68.7% (3,790) of U.S. issues are advancing, versus 29.1% (1,606) declining.

Notably, 64.4% (3,547) U.S. issues are now above their 50 day Simple Moving Average; 58.6% (3,229) are above their 200SMA.

Midday Movers

We can now turn our attention to the top and bottom 20 stocks with at least a $2 billion market cap in our Midday Movers list, where we aim to identify the big trends and stories of the day. Here’s what we have on the board:

Winners

Today’s top performing stock is Regencell Bioscience Holdings (+36.33%), a repeat member of this list which moves on all sorts of volatility.

In other notable movers, industrial and mining stocks are making big moves today: Critical Metals Corp (+27.2%), Americas Gold and Silver Corp (+19.6%), and USA Rare Earth (+19%) are among the crop, as well as five other gold-specific mining stocks.

There are also a handful of biotech-related stocks like Corcept (+15.9%), Beam (+11.2%), and Denali (+11.2%), continuing a recent uptrend seen in some bio names.

Even yesterday’s weaker-performers are getting a bid: AST SpaceMobile (+13.7%) has bounced onto the winners list after being stuck in the bottom 20 yesterday.

Losers

At the bottom of the market today, Inspire Medical Systems (-11.8%) is off nearly 12 percent. It’s joined by another medical device company, Abbott Laboratories (-9.9%), which reported disappointing earnings this morning.

There’s not a rhyme or reason to today’s decliners, but crypto-exposed equities such as Figure Technologies (-8.1%) and Hut 8 (-5.6%) are also on the list. So too are apparel retail companies such as Buckle (-5%) and Boot Barn (-4.8%), among others.

Update: 1:45 p.m. ET

Apple Hardware Chief Now Overseeing Design, Per Report

Apple hardware chief John Ternus is said to now be taking over the company’s design entirely, a key step towards a larger rumored rule: leading the world’s most valuable consumer technology company.

The report from Bloomberg suggests that Ternus’ new role could clearing the way for Ternus to eventually succeed CEO Tim Cook. However, a change at the top is not expected to come imminently, per reports.

Update: 1:04 p.m. ET

Northern Europe Pensions Weighing U.S. Asset Allocation

Amid the drama with Greenland, large pension managers in Sweden, Denmark, and Finland are reportedly reevaluating their holdings of U.S. stocks and bonds, including government debt, given rising geopolitical tensions. The move is significant, seeing how even a modest capital flight could crush demand for U.S. government debt or derail the market’s rally.

Update: 9:30 a.m. ET

Opening Bell

Read more in Reuters The U.S. markets are now opened. Out of the gate, today could be shaping up to do yesterday one better, as 70.8% (3,906) issues are advancing this morning against 21.7% (1,200) declining. However, we’re just getting off the ground this morning.

Just a few minutes after the market opening, the Russell 2000 (+0.78%) and Nasdaq (+0.76%) are already out and ahead, trailed closely by the Dow (+0.64%) and S&P 500 (+0.53%).

Surely helping today’s strong start is the equally-strong GDP data that was out this morning, which showed the U.S. economy grew rapidly in the third quarter of 2025. Strong earnings from this morning also contributed.

Here’s the S&P 500, the worst off among major U.S. benchmarks, at the open (15 min delayed) for context:

In Treasurys, the 10Y rose 1.6 bips to 4.269%. The 20Y and 30Y also rose 1.1 bip a piece to 4.838% and 4.881%, respectively.

commodities, continuous futures of gold (+0.19% to $4,846.90) and silver (+1.64% to $94.16) continued their march today. So too did natural gas (+3.71% to $3.666).

Personal Savings Decline to Lowest Since Oct. 2022

Even in late January, we’re still getting late economic data.

A new report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics showed that the personal savings rate fell to 3.5% in Nov. 2025, the lowest reading since Oct. 2022.

Adding some credibility, results for Oct. and Nov. 2025 crossed the wire at 10 a.m. ET, revealing that personal spending (adjusted for inflation) continued to grow faster than earnings could muster.

While personal income grew 0.1% month-over-month in October, then 0.3% more in November, spending were modeled to have grown 0.5% and 0.5% each.

This data could all be related, but it could also be skewed by the government shutdown data, so more insight is required to either confirm or rule out the uniquely worse Q4 showing. More data will be on the way in the coming weeks.

Update: 8:41 a.m. ET

A.M. Update

Good morning. After a funky start to the week, U.S. equities look likely to extend Wednesday’s comeback gains today, assuming the stars can remain aligned.

Today will see the busiest day of the fourth quarter earnings so far, plus a wide array of economic data. Here is what is on deck now that the Greenland situation and Japan’s recent bond market earthquake is (sorta) in the rear view:

Earnings Today: Procter & Gamble, GE Aerospace, Intel Corp.

As already mentioned, today will be the busiest day for fourth quarter earnings so far this season, anchored by Procter & Gamble, GE Aerospace, and Intel Corp., among other reports. Sorted by market cap, here are the 20 largest reports this morning:

And here are the top 20 reports after the bell:

Economic Data + Events: GDP Growth, Core PCE, Personal Income

Investors might be waiting for the Supreme Court to rule on two important cases, digesting commentary at the ongoing World Economic Forum conference in Davos, and weighing unknowns. However, today will offer a lot of insight closer to home as GDP Growth Data, Jobless Claims, Core PCE, and other reports are slated to be released.

The first of these reports are out this morning already, with the GDP Growth Rate for Q3 coming in at 3.7%. Initial and Continuing Claims were also largely in line.

Here’s the full array of reports, plus consensus estimates, per TradingEconomics: