Wall Street sets a record while the US dollar's value slides again
[January 28, 2026] By
STAN CHOE
NEW YORK (AP) — Wall Street ticked to a record on Tuesday, as stocks
zigzagged following mixed profit reports from UnitedHealth, General
Motors and other big companies.
The S&P 500 rose 0.4% and edged past its prior all-time high set a
couple weeks ago. The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 408 points,
or 0.8%, and the Nasdaq composite climbed 0.9% as the stock market
cleaved between winners and losers.
The swings were even bigger in foreign-currency markets, where the U.S.
dollar’s value slid against its peers again. Shortly after U.S. stocks
finished Tuesday’s trading, the dollar was down more than 1% against the
euro, the Japanese yen and the Australian dollar, among others. An index
measuring the U.S. dollar’s strength against several of its competitors
dropped to its lowest point since 2022.
The slide continues a sharp drop for the U.S. dollar since President
Donald Trump threatened tariffs against several European countries that
he said opposed his taking control of Greenland. Such threats, along
with worries about risks like the U.S. government’s heavy debt, have
periodically pushed global investors to step back from U.S. markets, a
move that’s come to be called “Sell America.”
On Wall Street, Corning helped lead the market higher and climbed 15.6%
after announcing a deal with Meta Platforms worth up to $6 billion.
Corning will supply optical fiber and cable to help build out data
centers for Meta, enough that Corning is expanding its optical-fiber
manufacturing facility in Hickory, North Carolina.

Also supporting the U.S. stock market were gains for General Motors,
which rose 8.7%, and hospital-operator HCA Healthcare, which rallied
7.1%. Both delivered profits for the end of 2025 that topped Wall
Street’s expectations. Each also approved programs to send billions of
dollars to their investors by buying back their own stock.
They helped offset a tumble for UnitedHealth Group, which sank 19.6%
despite reporting a profit for the latest quarter that was a bit better
than analysts expected. More attention was on the company’s forecast for
revenue in the upcoming year, which fell short of Wall Street’s
expectations and could be weaker than it was in 2025.
Health care stocks also felt tremendous pressure from a projected rate
increase for Medicare Advantage by the U.S. government, which fell well
short of what investors had hoped. Humana skidded by 21.1%, Elevance
Health dropped 14.3% and CVS Health sank 14.2%.
Profit reports elsewhere on Wall Street were mixed. UPS added 0.2% after
reporting a stronger profit and forecasting better revenue for 2026 than
analysts expected, while announcing the elimination of 30,000 jobs.
American Airlines lost 7% after delivering a profit for the end of 2025
that fell well short of analysts’ expectations.
The pressure is on companies to deliver strong growth in profits
following record-setting runs for their stock prices. Stock prices tend
to follow the path of corporate profits over the long term, and earnings
need to rise to quiet criticism that stock prices have grown too
expensive.
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Traders Robert Finnerty Jr., foreground, and Michael Milano work on
the floor of the New York Stock Exchange, Monday, Jan. 26, 2026. (AP
Photo/Richard Drew)
 Several of Wall Street’s most
influential stocks will deliver their latest earnings reports later
this week. They include Meta Platforms, Microsoft and Tesla on
Wednesday and Apple on Thursday.
Several of those Big Tech stocks were among the strongest forces
lifting the S&P 500 Tuesday, including gains of 2.2% for Microsoft
and 1.1% for Apple.
All told, the S&P 500 rose 28.37 points to 6,978.60. The Dow Jones
Industrial Average dropped 408.99 to 49,003.41, and the Nasdaq
composite rallied 215.74 to 23,817.10.
Another way stock prices can look less expensive to investors is if
interest rates fall. The Federal Reserve will announce its next move
on interest rates Wednesday, but the widespread expectation is that
it will hold its main interest rate steady for now.
Inflation remains stubbornly above the Fed’s 2% target, and lower
interest rates could worsen increases in prices for U.S. consumers
at the same time that they give the economy a boost. Traders expect
the Fed to resume its cuts to interest rates later this year.
In the bond market, Treasury yields were relatively steady ahead of
the Fed’s decision. The yield on the 10-year Treasury ticked up to
4.24% from 4.22% late Monday.
It had edged lower earlier in the day, after a report from the
Conference Board said confidence weakened among U.S. consumers last
month. Economists had expected to see a slight improvement, but
confidence dropped to its lowest level since 2014, even lower than
it was during the COVID-19 pandemic.
In stock markets abroad, indexes rose across much of Europe and
Asia.
India’s Sensex index added 0.4% after Prime Minister Narendra Modi
said the country had reached agreement on a free trade deal with the
European Union.

The accord, which touches 2 billion people, followed nearly two
decades of negotiations. It’s one of the biggest bilateral
engagements on commerce. The timing comes as Washington targets both
India and the EU with steep import tariffs.
South Korea’s Kospi jumped 2.7%, and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng rallied
1.4% for two of the world’s bigger moves.
___
AP Business Writers Matt Ott and Elaine Kurtenbach contributed.
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