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OCTOBER 30, 2018 / 4:27 pm
Wall St. rebounds as chip, transport shares surge
DJ: 24,874.64 +431.72 NAS: 7,161.65 +111.36 S&P: 2,682.63
+41.38 10/30
NEW YORK (Reuters) -
Major U.S. stock indexes jumped more than 1 percent on Tuesday, helped by
strong gains for chip and transport stocks as investors took advantage of
cheaper prices following a steep recent pullback for equities. All 11 major S&P 500 sectors ended higher
a day after a volatile session that pushed the benchmark S&P 500 lower and
close to confirming its second correction of 2018.
“You have had such a pounding here in the month of October that at some point you
would expect some bouncing
to begin and hold,” said Chuck Carlson, chief executive officer at Horizon
Investment Services in Hammond, Indiana.
“You are starting to see maybe people wading into the waters with, ‘Time
to buy some of these stocks.’ You saw that yesterday, but obviously it just
didn’t hold,” Carlson said.
The Dow Jones Industrial
Average rose 431.72 points, or 1.77 percent, to 24,874.64, the S&P 500
gained 41.38 points, or 1.57 percent, to 2,682.63 and the Nasdaq Composite
added 111.36 points, or 1.58 percent, to 7,161.65. The
Philadelphia semiconductor
index jumped 4.2 percent, its biggest one-day percentage gain since March.
Intel surged 5.2 percent and gave the biggest single-stock boost to the S&P
500.
Chip stocks also gained following a
brokerage upgrade of Nvidia shares and a
better-than-expected report from chip-gear maker KLA-Tencor. Nvidia shares
jumped 9.4 percent and KLA-Tencor shares rose 7.6 percent. Chip stocks had dropped broadly on Monday, as
renewed concerns about U.S.-China trade tensions sparked declines.
The Dow Jones Transport Average jumped 2.8 percent, its biggest
one-day rise in about a year. A drop in oil prices may have boosted closely
watched transport shares, Carlson said.
Market volatility has spiked in recent weeks, stemming
from higher U.S. interest ratesand worries about economic growth
peaking and trade tensions. Investors also may be increasingly nervous about
uncertainty surrounding U.S. congressional elections, now just a week away.
The S&P is on pace for its biggest monthly percentage drop
in more than eight years.
S&P 500 companies are on pace to have
posted a 25.3 percent rise
in third-quarter earnings with more than half of the constituents having
reported, according to I/B/E/S data from Refinitiv.
Despite the big overall
profit increase, some high-profile companies have issued disappointing reports. On Tuesday, General Electric shares tumbled
8.8 percent after the conglomerate drastically reduced its dividend and
said it faced a deeper accounting probe.
“As earnings roll in, most of them have been OK,” said Rick Meckler,
partner at Cherry Lane Investments in New Vernon, New Jersey.
“It’s just that some of the misses have been of the most well-known companies
and it has kind of overshadowed a little bit of the better earnings of smaller
companies or less iconic companies.”
In other earnings news, Coca-Cola Co’s shares rose 2.5 percent after the
beverage maker’s quarterly revenue and profit topped Wall Street expectations. Under Armour Inc’s shares surged 24.7 percent after the sportswear maker’s upbeat
quarterly earnings and full-year profit forecast.
Advancing issues outnumbered declining ones on the NYSE by a
2.26-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 2.09-to-1 ratio favored advancers. The S&P 500 posted 13 new 52-week highs
and 25 new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 18 new highs and 202 new lows.
About 9.6
billion shares changed hands in U.S. exchanges, above the 8.6 billion
daily average over the last 20 sessions.
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