For the third straight day we have a triple-digit rally with Big Tech roaring back as investors continue to ride the wave of optimism over the debt ceiling and the resurging recovery with today’s jobless benefits coming in at their lowest in three months. It is expected that employment will continue to ramp up and, with Q3 reporting starting next week, earnings are estimated to rise by nearly 30%. Volume again was a little below average at 10.1 billion.
Thu October 7,
2021 5:23 PM
Wall
Street ends day with solid gains; investors hail U.S. debt-ceiling truce
By Noel
Randewich and Lewis Krauskopf, Devik Jain
DJ: 34,416.99 +102.32 NAS: 14,501.91 +68.08 S&P: 4,363.55 +17.83 10/6
DJ: 34,754.94 +337.95 NAS: 14,654.02 +152.11 S&P: 4,399.76
+36.21 10/7
Oct 7 (Reuters) - Wall Street ended
sharply higher on Thursday in a broad-based rally led by Big Tech, as a truce
in the debt-ceiling standoff in the U.S. Congress relieved concerns of a
possible government debt default this month.
Mega-cap stocks jumped with Apple Inc (AAPL.O) up
0.9% and Amazon.com Inc (AMZN.O)rising
1.2%, the biggest boosts to the S&P 500 and Nasdaq. Tesla (TSLA.O) and
Google-parent Alphabet (GOOGL.O) both
rose more than 1%. The U.S. Senate took
a step toward passing a $480 billion increase in Treasury Department borrowing
authority, which would put off another partisan showdown until December. read
more
Uncertainty
over the debt-ceiling
negotiations was one concern investors cited in September as the S&P
500 logged its biggest monthly percentage drop since the onset of the
coronavirus pandemic in March 2020. "Today's (market) is driven by a
slight move in Washington towards rationality about being able to pay
their bills, write some checks," said Kim Forrest, chief investment
officer at Bokeh Capital Partners in Pittsburgh. Meanwhile, data showed the number of
Americans filing new
claims for jobless benefits dropped last week by the most in three months,
suggesting the labor market recovery was regaining momentum as the latest wave
of COVID-19 infections began to subside. read more The
closely watched monthly U.S. jobs report is due on Friday.
“Today’s
numbers reinforce the expectation
that employment will take a significant step up in the coming months,
and I think that’s positive for the economy,” said Brad Neuman, director of
market strategy at Alger. "The
market climbed its wall of worry today as fears of a debt-ceiling impasse
receded and hopes for an acceleration in employment gains were reinforced.”
The Dow Jones Industrial Average (.DJI) rose
0.98% to end at 34,754.94 points, while the S&P 500 (.SPX) gained
0.83% to 4,399.76. The Nasdaq
Composite (.IXIC) climbed 1.05% to
14,654.02. The S&P 500 materials index (.SPLRCM) jumped 1.35% and the consumer
discretionary index (.SPLRCD) rallied 1.50%, both leading among
11 sectors.
U.S.-traded
Chinese stocks Alibaba Group Holding (9988.HK) and Tencent Holdings (0700.HK) each surged about 8% as concerns
around U.S.-Sino trade relations and Evergrande's (3333.HK) debt crisis appeared to ease.
Investors
will watch third-quarter
earnings reports that start to arrive in earnest next week. Analysts on
average estimate S&P
500 companies' earnings per share rose 29% in the third quarter,
according to Refinitiv.
Levi
Strauss & Co (LEVI.N) shares jumped 8.5% after the jeans
maker beat third-quarter revenue and profit estimates. read more
Volume on U.S. exchanges was 10.1
billion shares, compared
with the 11 billion average over the last 20 trading days.
Advancing issues outnumbered declining ones on the NYSE by a 2.50-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 2.49-to-1 ratio favored advancers. The S&P 500 posted 31 new 52-week highs and four new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 93 new highs and 80 new lows.
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