We had another 3-digit gain on the Dow with a big boost from tech proving once again that it remains the investment of choice. After a month-long rout with both the Dow and S&P down for the fourth straight week, the great news today is the opinion of one expert, “The reality is that 2021 is going to be a much higher stock market and you’re probably going to see tech still lead the way.” Tech is still seen as the one sector that will do well regardless of which way the pandemic swings. Today value was abandoned in favor of growth. But traditional risk-haven value stocks will always be the hedge on the down days. Volume was below average at just under 8.9 billion.
FRI SEPTEMBER 25, 2020 5:05 pm
Wall Street ends higher as tech rally
squashes virus fears, but S&P down for week
DJ: 26,815.44 +52.31 NAS: 10,672.27 +39.28 S&P: 3,246.59 +9.67 9/24
DJ: 27,173.96 +358.52 NAS: 10,913.56 +241.30 S&P: 3,298.46
+51.87 9/25
(Reuters)
- Technology stocks again rode to Wall Street’s rescue on Friday, lifting the
main indexes more than 1%, but the Dow and the S&P 500 still posted their
longest weekly losing streaks in a year as fears of a slowing economy sparked
an almost month-long rout. Investors
started buying beaten-down shares after the Nasdaq confirmed a corrective phase
earlier this month and the S&P 500 on an intra-day basis briefly broke that
barrier this week. Both the Dow and
S&P 500 notched their fourth straight weekly declines, the longest weekly
losing streak since August 2019. The Nasdaq closed higher for the week after
falling the previous three, and is now up 22% for the year. The S&P 500 is
up a bit more than 2% for the year.
Investors
are looking at the long term and believe technology remains the investment of
choice, said Edward Moya,
senior market analyst at OANDA in New York.
“It’s dip buying,”
Moya said. “When you look at the correction that we’ve seen in these tech
giants, people are still going to want to hold U.S. equities. The reality is
that 2021 is going to be a
much higher stock market and you’re probably going to see tech still lead the
way.” Shares of tech mega-caps Apple
Inc AAPL.O,
Microsoft Corp MSFT.O and
Amazon.com Inc AMZN.O led
the way, followed by Nvidia Corp NVDA.O and Facebook Inc FB.O, rising at least 2.1%.
The information technology index .SPLRCT jumped 2.4% as investors ditched value-linked stocks .IVX on signs of a
slowdown in the broader economic recovery. Growth-oriented
shares .IVX gained
at a rate almost twice that of value stocks. Volatility .VIX has also shot up as investors look for
clarity on whether Congress will approve more stimulus ahead of the Nov. 3
presidential election, which now appears unlikely. The CBOE Market Volatility Index .VIX, known as Wall's fear gauge, fell 7.68%. “You’ve had this nice recovery through the summer, and coming
into the fall the economy is just a little bit more vulnerable, particularly
with a lot of the stimulus that we had starting to taper off now,” said Mike
Dowdall, portfolio manager at BMO Global Asset Management in Chicago.
The Dow
Jones Industrial Average .DJI rose 358.52 points,
or 1.34%, to 27,173.96. The S&P 500 .SPX gained 51.87 points,
or 1.60%, to 3,298.46 and the Nasdaq Composite .IXIC added 241.30 points,
or 2.26%, to 10,913.56. For
the week, the Dow unofficially fell 1.74%, the S&P 500 slid 0.63%, and the
Nasdaq gained 1.1%.
Volume
on U.S. exchanges was 8.89 billion shares,
The S&P industrials sector .SPLRCI rose 1.49% as data showed new orders for
key U.S.-made capital goods jumped in August, while a 0.06% slide in energy
stocks .SPNY gave
them their worst week since mid-June.
Cruise liners Royal Caribbean Cruises
Ltd RCL.N,
Norwegian Cruise Line NCLH.N and Carnival Corp CCL.N jumped 7.7% or more after Barclays upgraded
their shares to "overweight." Shares
of Boeing Co BA.N rose
6.8% and led the Dow higher after the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration said
its chief will conduct an evaluation flight of the grounded 737 MAX and
European safety regulators indicated a potential resumption of flights by year
end. Costco Wholesale Corp COST.O fell 1.27% as the warehouse chain
recorded high coronavirus-related costs for a second straight quarter.
Novavax
Inc NVAX.O jumped
10.9% after the drugmaker launched a
late-stage trial of
its experimental COVID-19 vaccine
in the UK. The number of coronavirus cases in the U.S. topped 7
million, as Midwest states reported spikes in COVID-19 infections in
September, according to a Reuters tally.
Advancing issues outnumbered declining
ones on the NYSE by a 2.30-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 2.94-to-1 ratio favored
advancers. The S&P 500 posted one
new 52-week high and no new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 26 new highs
and 49 new lows.
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