The S&P 500 has entered February trading week hovering near the psychologically important 7,000 level after briefly crossing it intraday for the first time in late January — a milestone driven by persistent enthusiasm around AI, expectations for easier monetary policy, and strong earnings focus in mega-cap technology.
The index traded above 7,000 during the session but finished just under the mark, underscoring how tightly the market is clustering around the round-number threshold as investors gauge whether the rally has enough breadth to sustain a new plateau.
A large share of the recent lift has come from AI-linked names and the broader technology complex, helped by expectations that rate cuts could support valuations. Estimates cited in reporting pointed to 2026 profit growth improving versus 2025, with technology-sector earnings seen as a key driver.
The S&P 500 is widely tracked and replicated by funds and ETFs, making round-number milestones more than just headlines: they can influence flows, risk appetite, and how both professional and retail investors frame performance.
With the market near all-time highs, investors are watching whether earnings guidance can keep up with expectations, whether AI spending remains strong enough to justify premium valuations, and whether rate-path assumptions shift if inflation data surprises.