French election results catapult Wall Street higher; Nasdaq
sets record
DJ: 20,763.89 +216.13 NAS: 5,983.82
+73.30 S&P: 2,374.15
+25.46 4/24
(Reuters) U.S. stocks rallied on Monday, tracking a
relief rally that swept through Asian and European markets, after centrist
candidate and market favorite Emmanuel Macron won the first round of the French
presidential election. Pro-EU Macron is
expected to beat right-wing rival Marine Le Pen in a deciding vote on May 7
according to polls, which were mostly right about the first-round results.
"This alleviates fears that we
were going to have to navigate a French exit (from) the European Union," said Brian
Jacobsen, chief portfolio strategist at Wells Fargo Funds Management in
Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin.
"This
is a classic relief rally showing up most in financials," he said.
"We cleared this hurdle and now it's a little bit more clear
running."
European
banks .SX7E jumped 7.4 percent while banks on the S&P 500 .SPXBK added 2.8
percent.
The
moves across markets point to an unwinding of bets taken in the past few days
when traders had turned defensive ahead of the French election.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average .DJI rose 216.13
points, or 1.05 percent, to 20,763.89, the S&P 500 .SPX gained 25.46
points, or 1.08 percent, to 2,374.15 and the Nasdaq Composite .IXIC added 73.30
points, or 1.24 percent, to 5,983.82.
MSCI's
gauge of stocks across the globe .MIWD00000PUS gained 1.56 percent to 453.5
after touching a record high of 453.7.
U.S. investors are also gearing up for
the busiest earnings week in at least a decade, with over 190 S&P 500
members, including heavyweights Alphabet (GOOGL.O) and
Microsoft (MSFT.O), due to
report results this week.
"Earnings are coming in better
than expected and this is for a quarter where estimates were pretty
tight. We didn't see much pullback with estimates in the course of the quarter,
so expectations were high and we're beating them," said Art Hogan, chief
market strategist at Wunderlich Securities in New York.
Of
the 100 S&P 500 companies that have reported results so far, 77 percent have beaten profit
expectations, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S. This has helped lift
the blended profit growth estimates to 11 percent from 10 percent at the start
of the earnings season.
Medical
device maker C R Bard (BCR.N) jumped almost 20
percent to $302.41 after U.S. medical equipment supplier Becton Dickinson (BDX.N) said it would buy
Bard for $24 billion.
Defensive
trades suffered as traders embraced risk. Spot gold XAU= dropped 0.6 percent to
$1,276.10 an ounce. The safe-haven Japanese yen weakened 0.58 percent versus
the greenback at 109.73 per dollar. The CBOE Volatility index .VIX ended at
10.84, its lowest since Feb. 14.
Advancing
issues outnumbered declining ones on the NYSE by a 2.47-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq,
a 2.61-to-1 ratio favored advancers.
The
S&P 500 posted 72 new 52-week highs and 2 new lows; the Nasdaq Composite
recorded 191 new highs and 43 new lows.
About
6.8 billion shares changed
hands in U.S. exchanges, above the 6.3 billion daily average over the
last 20 sessions.
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