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FEBRUARY 15, 2018 / 4:51 pM
Wall St. rallies for fifth straight session on tech lift
DJ: 25,200.37 +306.88 NAS: 7,256.43 +112.82 S&P: 2,731.20
+32.57 2/15
(Reuters) - Wall Street surged on
Thursday to notch its fifth straight session of gains, led by Apple and
other technology stocks as investors
shrugged off recent inflation worries that sent the market into a sell-off at
the start of the month.
Apple Inc jumped 3.36 percent and contributed more than
any other stock to gains on the S&P 500 after Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway made the iPhone
maker its top investment. Markets were able to shake off
economic data for a second consecutive session that indicated inflation
pressures were building while weekly jobless claims data on Thursday
pointed to a tightening labor market. Investors
instead focused on recent
strong quarterly earnings and expectations that more earnings growth is
still to come, thanks to newly-implemented corporate and personal tax cuts.
“In the midst of all the nervousness of
the past two weeks, we’re winding out a really strong earnings reporting season,” said Leo
Grohowski, chief investment officer at BNY Mellon Wealth Management in New
York. “There were a lot of eyes fixating
on the PPI number this morning, it came in a little hot. But much like
yesterday, the market’s shaking it off.”
Following many forecast increases by corporations in recent weeks, analysts
on average now expect S&P
500 companies to increase their earnings per share in 2018 by 18.9 percent,
according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.
Cisco surged 4.73 percent following upbeat results and a
strong forecast, as the network gear maker’s years-long efforts to transform
into a software-focused company began to pay off. Wall Street investors were not alone in their
optimism. Bullish
sentiment among individual investors hit its highest level since mid-January in
the American Association of Individual Investors’ weekly survey.
The Dow Jones Industrial
Average rose 306.88 points, or 1.23 percent, to 25,200.37, the S&P 500
gained 32.57 points, or 1.21 percent, to 2,731.2 and the Nasdaq Composite added
112.82 points, or 1.58 percent, to 7,256.43
Energy was the only major S&P 500 sector index to fall,
pulled down 0.42 percent by weaker oil prices.
U.S. Treasury yields slipped as investors took a breather from selling
bonds and readjusted positions to prepare for more inflation-related
volatility, a scenario that could take yields even higher. Fears of inflation and higher interest rates
had sent the S&P 500 sharply lower at the start of February. In the past five sessions, the
S&P 500 has gained 5.6 percent, and it remains down 4.9 percent from a Jan
26 record high.
Advancing issues outnumbered declining ones on the NYSE
by a 2.27-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 2.25-to-1 ratio favored advancers.
Volume on U.S.
exchanges was 7.12 billion shares, below the
8.46 billion average for the full session over the last 20 trading days.
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