After three very down days, the indexes sprang back today with investors picking up major bargains in the tech companies with the big FAANG stocks rising by at least 3% each. The sentiment remains that these are companies that will be around whatever happens with COVID and, despite the scare that Japan’s SoftBank threw at the market last week, that tech isn’t going anywhere. Growth stocks today outperformed value by more than 2 to 1. Volume was a little below average at 8.9 billion.
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SEPTEMBER 9, 2020 / 4:25 pm
Wall
Street ends higher on tech rally to snap three-day skid
DJ: 27,500.89 -632.42 NAS: 10,847.69 -465.44 S&P: 3,331.84 -95.12 9/8
DJ: 27,940.47 +439.58 NAS: 11,141.56 +293.87 S&P: 3,398.96
+67.12 9/9
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Wall
Street’s main indexes ended higher on Wednesday to snap a three-session losing
skid as investors jumped back in to take advantage of the pullback in
technology-related stocks, a day after the Nasdaq confirmed correction
territory. Tesla Inc shares rebounded
10.92% after suffering their biggest one-day percentage drop in the prior session,
while Apple Inc, Microsoft Corp and Amazon.com Inc - the top three U.S. public
companies by market capitalization - each rose by at least 3%. Other stay-at-home winners such as Facebook
Inc and Google-parent Alphabet Inc also climbed, a day after the tech-heavy
Nasdaq ended 10% below its Sept. 2 record closing high, commonly known as a
correction. The S&P tech sector notched its biggest one-day percentage gain
since April 29.
“It’s certainly a massive, surprising rebound,” said Jack Ablin, chief investment
officer at Cresset Capital Management in Chicago. “On one level it looks speculative but on
another it is almost defensive because we know these companies will survive no matter what COVID throws
at us.” Analysts also said the
Nasdaq’s ability to hold its 50-day moving average, a technical support level,
was key in reversing the market’s direction.
The
Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 439.58 points, or 1.6%, to close at
27,940.47, the S&P 500 gained 67.12 points, or 2.01%, to 3,398.96 and the
Nasdaq Composite added 293.87 points, or 2.71%, to 11,141.56. The
percentage gains marked the best one-day performance for the S&P since June
5, the Nasdaq since April 29 and the Dow since July 14.
U.S.
stocks have become susceptible to volatility as market leadership has narrowed
during the year to a handful of heavyweight tech-related stocks as traders bid
up their shares in a rally that triggered a Nasdaq-led rebound for Wall Street
from its pandemic lows in March. The recent pullback has also
been driven by worries that sellers of call options would unwind massive
amounts of stocks they bought as hedges during the rally. Media reports last week said SoftBank Group
Corp has made big bets on equity derivatives tied to tech firms. In a sign of growing unease about the
positioning in tech stocks, skew, a measure of demand for protective put
options in relation to call options, has risen sharply.
Market volatility is expected to further
increase in the run-up to the U.S. presidential election, with September and
October also historically turbulent months of the year. In a reversal from the prior three sessions, growth stocks jumped 2.59% to
outperform the 1.13% climb in value stocks. Market participants were watching for signs
of a widening in market breadth, supported by improving economic data.
AstraZeneca
Plc could resume trials for its experimental coronavirus vaccine next week, the
Financial Times reported, after the British drugmaker paused global trials of
its experimental COVID-19 vaccine. Still, its U.S.-listed shares fell 1.96%. Tiffany & Co tumbled 6.44% after French
luxury goods giant LVMH warned it was set to walk away from its planned $16
billion takeover of the U.S. jeweler.
Advancing
issues outnumbered declining ones on the NYSE by a 2.98-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq,
a 2.27-to-1 ratio favored advancers. The
S&P 500 posted 3 new 52-week highs and 2 new lows; the Nasdaq Composite
recorded 31 new highs and 25 new lows.
About
8.91 billion shares
changed hands in U.S. exchanges, compared with the 9.21 billion daily
average over the last 20 sessions.
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