In this on-again, off-again market, the pendulum swung to on-again today as Big Tech made a Big Comeback, the S&P coming back almost halfway from yesterday, now 3% below the September high rather than 5 percent. As today’s expert summed it up, “We’re buying the dip, but the dip isn’t 10% anymore. The dip is now 2% or 4%.” Wednesday the Senate will vote on the debt ceiling and Friday will come the September employment report. And you can bet there will be more dips and more buying the dip as we proceed. Volume was a little below average at 10.3 billion.
Tue October 5,
2021 4:21 PM
Wall
Street closes sharply higher as Big Tech roars back
By Noel
Randewich and Shreyashi Sanyal
DJ: 34,002.92 -323.54 NAS: 14,255.49 -311.21 S&P: 4,300.46 -56.58 10/4
DJ: 34,314.67 +311.75 NAS: 14,433.83 +178.35 S&P: 4,345.72
+45.26 10/5
Oct 5 (Reuters) - Wall Street ended
sharply higher on Tuesday, as Microsoft and Apple spearheaded a strong rebound
in growth stocks and investors awaited monthly payrolls data later this week
that could influence the U.S. Federal Reserve's decision on when to scale back
monetary stimulus. Apple (AAPL.O),
Microsoft (MSFT.O), Amazon (AMZN.O) and
Alphabet (GOOGL.O), Wall Street's most
valuable companies, each rose more than 1% following a selloff in growth stocks
the day before. Facebook Inc (FB.O) rebounded
2.1% a day after taking a beating when its app and its photo-sharing platform
Instagram went offline for hours. Nine
of the 11 major S&P 500 sector indexes rose, with financials (.SPSY),
communication services (.SPLRC) and
technology (.SPLRCT)leading the way. The S&P 500 logged its fourth straight
day of 1% moves in either direction. The last time the index saw that much
volatility was in November 2020, when it rose or fell 1% or more for seven
straight sessions.
"We're buying the dip, but the
dip isn't 10% anymore. The dip is now 2%, or 4%," said Jake
Dollarhide, chief executive officer of Longbow Asset Management in Tulsa,
Oklahoma. "People are trained like Pavlov's dog to buy the dip, which is
reinforcing all of this." Technology
stocks and other high-growth stocks took a beating on Monday as U.S. Treasury
yields ticked higher amid concerns about a potential U.S. government debt
default.
The Senate will vote on Wednesday on a
Democratic-backed measure to suspend the U.S. debt ceiling, a key lawmaker said on Tuesday, as
partisan brinkmanship in Congress risks an economically crippling federal
credit default. read more Investors
will watch September
employment data on Friday for hints about the tapering of the U.S.
Federal Reserve's asset purchase program.
Adding to concerns the Fed could tighten monetary policy sooner than
expected, recent data showed increased consumer spending, accelerated factory
activity and elevated inflation. Data
from the Institute for Supply Management showed its U.S. non-manufacturing activity index
edged up to a reading of 61.9 last month from 61.7 in August. read more
The Dow Jones Industrial Average (.DJI) rose
0.92% to end at 34,314.67 points, while the S&P 500 (.SPX) gained
1.05% to 4,345.73. The Nasdaq
Composite (.IXIC) climbed 1.25% to
14,433.83. The S&P 500 is down more
than 3% from its record high close on Sept. 2. However, about half of the
index's components have fallen 10% or more from their own 52-week highs.
PepsiCo
Inc (PEP.O) gained 0.6% after raising its
full-year revenue forecast. read more
Volume on U.S. exchanges was 10.3
billion shares, compared
with the 10.9 billion average over the last 20 trading days.
Advancing
issues outnumbered declining ones on the NYSE by a 1.45-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq,
a 1.43-to-1 ratio favored advancers.
The S&P 500 posted 16 new 52-week highs and 7 new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 71 new highs and 207 new lows.
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