With the 10-year note backing further away from its recent high and reaching its lowest level since March 26th, it was another day of migrating from value to tech with the Nasdaq gaining another 140 points, now just 2% off from the February record. Trading has tapered off in recent days due to concerns over Q1 earnings being overly optimistic so volume remains way below average, today at just 9.2 billion. But the banks start reporting next week. Then the games will begin.
THU APRIL 8, 2021 4:26 PM
S&P closes at record on tech
boost as U.S. Treasury yields retreat
DJ: 33,446.26 +16.02 NAS: 13,688.84 -9.54 S&P: 4,079.95 +6.01 4/7
DJ: 33,503.57 +57.31 NAS: 13,829.31 +140.47 S&P: 4,097.17 +17.22 4/8
NEW
YORK (Reuters) -The S&P 500 closed at a record high on Thursday, as U.S.
Treasury yields fell following softer-than-anticipated labor market data,
boosting technology and other growth stocks.
Weekly initial jobless claims data showed a second straight rise,
conflicting with the recent payrolls report, and buttressed the Federal
Reserve’s dovish policy stance to keep interest rates lower for a substantial
period. Federal Reserve Chair Jerome
Powell signaled on Wednesday the central bank is nowhere near reducing support
for the U.S. economy, saying an expected rise in prices this year is likely to
be temporary.
The softer data helped yields on the
benchmark 10-year U.S.
Treasury note fall as low as 1.624%, its lowest level since March 26, as
it continues to back away from a 14-month high of 1.776% hit in late March. “Wall Street rewards growth, that doesn’t
mean value names will never go up, they will go up because they have more
growth prospects than their neighbors, that is what this whole thing is
predicated on,” said Kim Forrest, chief investment officer at Bokeh Capital
Partners in Pittsburgh. “It was kind of
ridiculous that bond yields were preceding runaway inflation and that was not
the case, so tech lives another day.”
The
Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 57.31 points, or 0.17%, to 33,503.57, the
S&P 500 gained 17.22 points, or 0.42%, to 4,097.17 and the Nasdaq Composite
added 140.47 points, or 1.03%, to 13,829.31. The recent pullback in yields has helped high growth names such
as those in technology, the sector that posted the session’s biggest rise.
Megacap stocks such as Apple, Microsoft and Amazon were the biggest boosts to
the S&P 500.
The gains sent the tech-heavy Nasdaq to a seven-week high and
within 2% of its Feb. 12 record closing high. The Russell 1000 growth index, which consists
heavily of tech-related stocks, gained 1.05%. Its value counterpart, comprising
mostly financials and energy names, edged 0.05% lower.
Trading
activity has tapered off, with the four lowest volume days of the year
occurring this week ahead of first-quarter earnings season next week with results from big U.S. banks on
tap. Analysts have raised expectations for first-quarter S&P 500 earnings increase to
24.2%, according to Refinitiv IBES data as of April 1, versus 21%
forecast on Feb. 5.
Tesla Inc advanced 1.91% on the Joe
Biden administration’s $174 billion proposal to boost electric vehicles. U.S. shares of Canopy Growth Corp dropped
4.81% on a deal to buy rival Supreme Cannabis Co Inc for C$323.3 million
($256.9 million), as the world’s biggest cannabis producer bolstered its
portfolio to tap surging demand.
Advancing issues outnumbered declining
ones on the NYSE by a 1.80-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 2.13-to-1 ratio favored
advancers. The S&P 500 posted 36 new
52-week highs and 1 new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 77 new highs and 29
new lows.
Volume on U.S. exchanges was 9.23 billion shares, compared with the 11.93 billion average for the full session over the last 20 trading days.
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