Markets |
Wall St. rises, racks up fourth straight week
of gains
DJ: 18,570.85 +53.62 NAS: 5,100.16
+26.26 S&P: 2,175.03
+9.86
(Reuters) Wall
Street rose on Friday, clinching the fourth straight positive week for the
stock market, boosted by strength in telecom stalwarts AT&T and Verizon. A U.S. manufacturing report also came in above expectations, building
on upbeat data from earlier in the month.
Gains were limited by weakness in reports from industrial companies
including General Electric.
The S&P and Dow have
broken to all-time records in the past two weeks for the first time in
more than a year amid a better-than-feared corporate earnings season. The S&P closed at another
record high on Friday.
“Below it all is just an ongoing trend of better economic reports,"
said Jim Paulsen, chief investment strategist at Wells Capital Management in
Minneapolis. "Some of those are earnings reports, but they all line up to
the same thing: It looks like growth is quickening.”
The Dow Jones industrial
average .DJI rose 53.62 points, or 0.29 percent, to
18,570.85, the S&P 500 .SPX gained 9.86 points, or 0.46 percent, to
2,175.03 and the Nasdaq Composite.IXIC added 26.26 points, or 0.52 percent, to
5,100.16.
The S&P 500 is up more than 6 percent in 2016, shaking off a
rough start to the year and global instability, including Britain's recent vote
to leave the European Union.
"We’re well past the
Brexit fallout and the subsequent rebound," said Peter Kenny,
senior market strategist at Global Markets Advisory Group in Berkeley Heights,
New Jersey. "We’re seeing oil is fairly well-contained and range-bound. So
those two variables are off the table, and they have played a big part in
triggering volatility."
All 10 sectors ended higher on Friday, led by utilities .SPLRCU
and telecoms .SPLRCL - defensive, high-dividend-paying groups that have lifted
the market this year.
AT&T (T.N)
climbed 1.4 percent after its results. Verizon (VZ.N) rose
1.3 percent. The company is the front-runner for Yahoo's core business, Reuters
reported. Yahoo (YHOO.O)
closed up 1.4 percent.
GE (GE.N)
shares slid 1.6 percent. The U.S. industrial conglomerate reported weak demand
for new oil, gas and transportation equipment.
Rival Honeywell (HON.N) fell
2.6 percent after the diversified manufacturer lowered its full-year sales
forecast.
Still, second-quarter
earnings for S&P 500 companies, which started reporting in earnest
this week, are now
expected to decline by only 3 percent, less severe than the 4.5 percent
drop estimated at the start of the month, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.
Results from about 40 percent of the S&P 500 are due next
week, including reports from tech heavyweights.
Investors will also be watching the Federal Reserve's meeting
next week for clues about when the U.S. central bank might next seek to raise
interest rates.
About 5.6
billion shares changed hands in U.S. exchanges, below the nearly 7.5
billion daily average over the past 20 sessions.
Advancing issues outnumbered declining ones on the NYSE by a
2.01-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 1.88-to-1 ratio favored advancers.
The S&P 500 posted 34 new 52-week highs and no new lows; the
Nasdaq Composite recorded 98 new highs and 20 new lows.
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