The Dow surged more than 400 points to an intraday record on Thursday, as investors were relieved after data showed a still robust US economy, while Nvidia slipped as its largely in-line forecast failed to exceed lofty expectations for the AI chip firm.

In midday trading, the Dow Jones Industrial Average advanced 431 points, or 1.1%, to 41,522. The previous intraday record was 41,420.05, reached on Monday.

The blue-chip index closed at record of 41,250.50 on Tuesday.

The S&P 500 gained 0.9%, and the Nasdaq climbed 1.2%.

The benchmark S&P 500 is about 1% away from a record high.

A commerce department report showed the US economy grew faster than the initial estimates, amid strong consumer spending.

“The economy is not slipping into a recession anytime soon and that’s beneficial for the stock market, along with a rate cut that’s very likely coming in September,” said Robert Pavlik, senior portfolio manager at Dakota Wealth.

Markets have seesawed between marginal gains and losses in the run-up to Nvidia’s results, as traders waited to see if the company would sustain its unmatched revenue growth.

Nvidia’s largely in-line revenue forecast for the current quarter despite upbeat second-quarter results disappointed investors.

The chip bellwether’s shares were down 2.%.

“This is the first time that there has been criticism of the estimates beat and the outlook raise. It is not as great as some investors had anticipated,” said Peter Andersen, founder of Andersen Capital Management.

“Nvidia might be showing early signs of slowdown in capital expenditure for artificial intelligence.”

Although, semiconductor peers Broadcom and Advanced Micro Devices rose 1.7% and 0.9%, respectively, aiding a 1.2% rise in the Philadelphia SE Semiconductor index.

Nvidia’s heavyweight megacap customers, which have been the focus of market euphoria on the prospect of artificial intelligence integration boosting corporate profits also rose with Microsoft, Meta and Alphabet up more than 0.9% each.

Apple gained more than 2% after Citigroup selected the iPhone maker as its top AI pick over Nvidia.

This helped the tech sector lead sectoral gains with a 0.9% rise.

Odds of a reduction of 25 basis points in September stand at 67.5%, while those of a larger 50 bps cut are at 32.5%, according to CME Group’s Fed Watch Tool.

A Labor Department report showed jobless claims were marginally lower than expected for the previous week.

Friday’s Personal Consumption Expenditure data for June, could offer hints on the central bank’s monetary policy easing trajectory.

Dow-component Salesforce beat Wall Street expectations for second-quarter results, sending the enterprise cloud firm’s shares up 1.1%.

CrowdStrike dropped 6.7% after the cybersecurity company cut its revenue and profit forecasts in the aftermath of last month’s global tech outage.

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