For the second day, the market is absorbing the good news about inflation which shot all three indexes up again, boosted by the additional good news of a fall in jobless claims and the signing of the stimulus bill. The Nasdaq had a particularly good day with the stalwarts Microsoft, Apple, Facebook, and Amazon recouping their losses from prior sessions and pulling back more again from correction territory. In just a few days, the index has gone from 12% down from the February high to today just 5% down. The rotation continues. Value stocks which suffered during the pandemic are recovering their valuations while the tech stocks which benefitted from the pandemic are giving back part of theirs in a market where valuations in general are at an extreme. The Dow was up some 350 points around noon but settled at close 188 points up, the auction of 30-year Treasury bonds did nothing to stoke more inflation fears and the fall in jobless claims gave added optimism in strides toward a pre-pandemic life. Volume remains below the 4-week average at just over 13 billion.
THU MARCH 11, 2021 4:22 PM
S&P 500, Dow end at record highs
after upbeat jobless claims data
DJ: 32,297.02 +464.28 NAS: 13,068.83 -4.99 S&P: 3,898.81 +23.37 3/10
DJ: 32,485.59 +188.57 NAS: 13,398.67 +329.84 S&P: 3,939.34
+40.53 3/11
(Reuters)
- The S&P 500 and the Dow closed at all-time highs on Thursday as worries
about rising inflation subsided, while a bigger-than-expected fall in weekly
jobless claims and the signing of a massive stimulus bill reinforced
expectations of a strong economic recovery.
Mega-cap stocks Microsoft Corp, Apple Inc, Facebook Inc and Amazon.com
Inc led the rally, recouping losses from a recent pullback and helping the
benchmark S&P 500 surpass its Feb. 12 close of 3,934.83. The blue-chip Dow scaled a new record for the
fourth straight session, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq is now less than 5% below
its Feb. 12 peak after slumping over 10% to confirm a correction at the
beginning of this week.
President
Joe Biden signed his $1.9 trillion stimulus bill into law on Thursday, commemorating the one-year
anniversary of a U.S. lockdown over the coronavirus pandemic with a measure
designed to bring relief to Americans and boost the economy. The relief package, on top of the ongoing
recovery fueled by the coronavirus vaccination rollout and fading fears of
inflation, were driving the market, said Jason Pride, chief investment officer
for private wealth at Glenmede in Philadelphia.
While tech led Thursday’s advance, there was still a rotation into value stocks, which have
outperformed high-priced growth stocks since November. “There is a recovery in the valuations of those companies more impacted by the
epidemic and a giveback of
the valuations of those companies that were more insulated and maybe even perhaps
benefited from the pandemic,” Pride said.
“Markets are trading at valuation extremes at this point,” he said.
The
Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 188.57 points, or 0.58%, to 32,485.59, the
S&P 500 gained 40.53 points, or 1.04%, to 3,939.34 and the Nasdaq Composite
added 329.84 points, or 2.52%, to 13,398.67.
Volume
on U.S. exchanges was 13.02 billion shares, compared with the 14.871 billion average for the full
session over the last 20 trading days.
Fewer than expected Americans filed new claims for unemployment
benefits last week as vaccinations allow more segments of the economy to
reopen. “The drop in jobless claims is another win for the week,
and a solid sign that we’re making
some strides toward pre-pandemic life,” said Mike Loewengart, managing
director of investment strategy at E*Trade Financial.
The latest U.S. Treasury auction -- $24
billion of 30-year bonds
-- did not reignite inflation concerns unlike a weak seven-year note
auction last month that helped send yields higher, spooking markets. “That story line has dissipated a little
bit,” said Pride, pointing to tame consumer prices data for February. The S&P 500’s industrials and communication services sectors
reached all-time highs. Wall
Street’s fear gauge hit a
two-week low at 21.45 points before ending at 21.91, a sign of easing
fears over inflation.
Coupang, backed by SoftBank Group Corp,
ended the day valued at about $85 billion on Thursday after South Korea’s
largest e-commerce company and a group of investors raised around $4.6 billion
in the biggest U.S. initial public offering this year. SoftBank racked up a roughly $33 billion
paper gain after Coupang’s stock soared 81% to open at $63.50, and later pared
gains to close up 40.7% at $49.25. Bumble
Inc jumped 10.8% after it reported a bigger-than-estimated rise in
fourth-quarter revenue and said it expected pent-up demand from people who had
been avoiding dating in person due to the pandemic. A so-called “meme” stock AMC Entertainment Holdings Inc gained 4.36%
as the cinema chain said the rollout of COVID-19 vaccines and the release of major movies would boost sales this year. Oracle Corp slumped 6.5% as the business
software maker’s cloud division reported quarterly revenue that missed
analysts’ estimates on increased competition from Amazon.com and Microsoft.
Advancing issues outnumbered declining ones on the NYSE by a 3.10-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 3.87-to-1 ratio favored advancers. The S&P 500 posted 74 new 52-week highs and no new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 327 new highs and eight new lows.
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