For the first day of Q2 it was a booming day for all three indexes, the Dow going straight up right out the gate and continuing straight up all day to gain 171, the same with the Nasdaq for a gain of 233 and so too with the S&P making history by breaking 4,000 for the first time. The lifts all came from the tech sector which, even though they remain behind the value stocks during this rotation, are now coming back. Unemployment rose last week but so did manufacturing hitting a 37 year high with factory employment the most robust in three years. The Nasdaq remains 5% below its February record but that’s an enormous improvement from a month ago. The VIX sank below 18 for the first time in 14 months indicating virtually no fear out there anymore, which will also certainly help with the recovery. The markets are closed for Good Friday so going into the Easter weekend (and spring break), volume was very light at 10.5 billion.
THU APRIL 1, 2021 7:05 PM
S&P 500 rides Microsoft, Amazon
to record close above 4,000
DJ: 32,981.55 -85.41 NAS: 13,246.87 +201.48 S&P: 3,972.89 +14.34 3/31
DJ: 33,153.21 +171.66 NAS: 13,480.11 +233.24 S&P: 4,019.87
+46.98 4/1
(Reuters)
-The S&P 500 surged on Thursday to its first-ever close above the 4,000
mark, lifted by gains in Microsoft, Amazon and Alphabet, as well as optimism
about a recovering U.S. economy. Microsoft,
Amazon, Alphabet and Nvidia jumped 2% or more, with those and other growth
stocks showing signs of awakening after lagging in recent weeks behind
so-called value stocks expected to outperform as the economy recovers from the
coronavirus pandemic. Google-parent
Alphabet’s 3.3% rally left it at its highest close ever.
Data showed the number of Americans
filing new claims for
unemployment benefits rose unexpectedly last week. However, other data
showed a measure of manufacturing
activity soared to its strongest level in more than 37 years in March,
with employment at
factories the highest since February 2018.
The
Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.52% to end at 33,153.21 points, while the
S&P 500 gained 1.18% to 4,019.87. The
Nasdaq Composite climbed 1.76% to 13,480.11. With its latest record,
the S&P 500 was up about 7% in 2021, and it has gained 80% from its low in
March 2020.
“We’re still bullish for this year, and we think that
with stimulus, with the Fed committed to being dovish, with the economy
reopening due to more of the U.S. getting vaccinated, overall you’re going see
corporate earnings do pretty well,” said King Lip, chief investment strategist
at Baker Avenue Asset Management in San Francisco.
U.S. stock markets will close on Good Friday for the holiday.
For the shortened week, the S&P 500 rose 1.1%, the Dow gained 0.25% and the
Nasdaq added 2.6%. Trading volume on U.S. exchanges
was light at 10.5 billion shares, compared with a 13 billion average
over the last 20 trading days.
The
Nasdaq remains about 5% below its Feb. 12 record high close, still smarting after higher U.S.
bond yields hurt technology stocks. Eight
of the S&P 500 sector indexes rose, with technology, communication services
and energy gaining more than 2%.
Micron Technology Inc jumped 4.8% after
the chipmaker forecast fiscal third-quarter revenue above Wall Street estimates
due to higher demand for memory chips, thanks to 5G smartphones and artificial
intelligence software. U.S.-listed
shares of rival Taiwan Semiconductor rose 5.5% after it said it will invest
$100 billion over three years to meet rising chip demand.
The CBOE volatility index slipped below 18 points for the first
time in 14 months, a level last seen before the coronavirus-driven
global financial market meltdown in March 2020.
Johnson & Johnson fell 0.9% after
the drugmaker said it had found a problem with a batch of the drug substance
for its COVID-19 vaccine being produced by Emergent Biosolutions, whose shares
tumbled 13.3%.
Advancing issues outnumbered declining ones on the NYSE by a 4.16-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 3.14-to-1 ratio favored advancers. The S&P 500 posted 29 new 52-week highs and no new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 83 new highs and 14 new lows.
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