All three indexes were heavily in the red until about noon when things began turning around with a big rally in the tech sector, particularly Microsoft, Alphabet, Apple and Oracle. Earlier in the day, the Nasdaq officially entered correction territory but recovered steam later and ended the day 8% down from the February high vs yesterday’s 9.7% down. The Dow recovered most of its previous losses with a gain of 572 points. 10-year Treasuries hit a one-year high at over 1.6% with payrolls increasing more than double the forecast. Both the Dow and S&P rose for the week with only the Nasdaq losing as funds continue to migrate away from pandemic tech stocks and into recovery cyclical stocks. Volume was considerably above the 4-week average at 17.4 billion.
FRI MARCH 5, 2021 5:48 PM
Fueled by tech, Wall Street rebounds
at end of volatile week
DJ: 30,924.14 -345.95 NAS: 12,723.47 -274.28 S&P: 3,768.47 -51.25 3/4
DJ: 31,496.30 +572.16 NAS: 12,920.15 +196.68 S&P: 3,841.94
+73.47 3/5
(Reuters)
- Wall Street ended sharply higher after a volatile session on Friday, with the
Nasdaq rebounding at the end of a week that saw it extend losses to about 10%
from its previous record high. All three
main indexes bounced back from losses earlier in the day, with investors in
recent sessions spooked by rising interest rates that offset optimism about an
economic rebound. Microsoft rallied
2.15%, boosting the S&P 500 more than any other stock, with gains in
Alphabet, Apple and Oracle also lifting the index. The benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury yields
hit a new one-year high of 1.626% after nonfarm payrolls increased by 379,000
jobs last month, blowing past a rise of 182,000 forecast by economists polled
by Reuters.
Focus
is also on a $1.9 trillion coronavirus aid bill as a sharply divided U.S. Senate began what was expected
to be a long debate over a slew of amendments on how that money would be spent. The Nasdaq logged its third straight weekly decline
after a recent spike in Treasury yields dented demand for high-flying
technology stocks. Rising interest rates
disproportionately hurt high-growth tech companies because investors value them
based on earnings expected years into the future, and high interest rates hurt
the value of future earnings more than the value of earnings made in the short
term.
The tech-heavy Nasdaq is around 8% below its Feb. 12 closing high. Jake Dollarhide, chief executive officer of
Longbow Asset Management in Tulsa, Oklahoma, said his firm in recent days has
bought shares in a handful of growth companies whose prices have been pummeled
in the recent selloff. “Next week, I
would expect volatility to continue, with pockets of opportunity, with certain
things that sold off potentially rebounding,” Dollarhide said.
The
Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 1.85% to end at 31,496.3 points, while the
S&P 500 gained 1.95% to 3,841.94. The
Nasdaq Composite climbed 1.55% to 12,920.15.
In a busy session, volume on U.S. exchanges was
17.4 billion shares, compared with the 15.3 billion average for the full
session over the last 20 trading days. For the week, the S&P 500
rose 0.8%, the Dow added 1.8% and the Nasdaq lost 2.1%.
In Friday’s session, the S&P 500
energy sector index surged 3.9% to over a one year high as oil prices soared.
[O/R] Oracle Corp jumped more than 6%
after Barclays upgraded the business software maker to “overweight” expecting
improvement in the IT spending environment.
Advancing issues outnumbered declining ones on the NYSE by a 2.86-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 2.12-to-1 ratio favored advancers. The S&P 500 posted 55 new 52-week highs and no new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 225 new highs and 134 new lows.
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