The New Year has started with a bang with all the indexes way up and the Dow and S&P at new records as the market continues to ride the Omicron wave with the consensus that it will not be economically debilitating. Also boosting sentiment is the history that January is almost always one of the biggest months of the year and that we have now come through the biggest three year advance since 1999. The index report card for 2021 looks like this – Dow +18.7%, Nasdaq +21.4%, S&P +27%. For the first trading day of the year, volume was close to the 4-week average at 10.0 billion.
Mon January 3,
2022 5:54 PM
S&P
500, Dow hit record highs on 1st trading day of 2022
By Caroline Valetkevitch
DJ: 36,338.30 -59.78 NAS: 15,644.97 -96.59 S&P: 4,766.18 -12.55 12/31
DJ: 36,585.06 +246.76 NAS: 15,832.80 +187.83 S&P: 4,796.56
+30.38 1/3
NEW YORK, Jan 3 (Reuters) - The S&P
500 (.SPX) and
Dow Jones Industrial Average (.DJI) posted
closing record highs on the first trading day of the year on Monday, helped by
gains in Tesla Inc (TSLA.O) and
bank shares. Apple Inc (AAPL.O) became
the first company to hit a $3 trillion market capitalization but ended the day
slightly below that. Its shares ended up 2.5% at $182.01 after rising as high
as $182.88 during the session. read
more Tesla's shares
jumped 13.5% after the electric car maker's quarterly deliveries beat analysts'
estimates, riding out global chip shortages as it ramped up production in
China. read
more The two stocks
gave the biggest boosts to the S&P 500, but market watchers said easing
investor worries about the economic impact of the Omicron variant of the
coronavirus also helped market sentiment, even with rising COVID-19 case
numbers.
"The real news is people feel
like this latest round of COVID is not going to be economically debilitating
in that a lot of restrictions and lockdowns are going to be required,"
said Stephen Massocca, senior vice president at Wedbush Securities in San
Francisco. Among the latest
developments, the U.S.
Food and Drug Administration authorized a third dose of Pfizer Inc (PFE.N) and BioNTech's COVID-19 vaccine
for children aged 12 to 15. read more Thousands
of U.S. schools have delayed this week's scheduled return to classrooms
following the holiday break or switched to remote learning as the Omicron
variant drives record levels of COVID-19. read more
Massocca
said market strength is not surprising as a new year starts, given the January
effect, or belief by some
investors that stocks will rise that month more than in other months. "It bodes well to see the market so resilient,"
he said. All of Wall Street's main indexes ended 2021
with monthly, quarterly and annual gains, recording their biggest three-year advance since
1999.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average (.DJI) rose
246.76 points, or 0.68%, to 36,585.06; the S&P 500 (.SPX) gained
30.38 points, or 0.64%, at 4,796.56; and the Nasdaq Composite (.IXIC) added
187.83 points, or 1.2%, at 15,832.80.
Energy
and financial sectors were among top gainers, with bank shares rising along
with U.S. Treasury yields as investors braced for what could be an
earlier-than-expected interest rate hike by the Federal Reserve this year
despite the recent jump in COVID-19 cases.
Energy shares climbed with crude oil prices and upbeat prospects for
demand. read more Wells
Fargo's shares advanced 5.7%, also helped by their upgrade to
"overweight" by Barclays.
The
benchmark S&P 500
added 27% in 2021 and reported 70 record-high closes, its the
second-most ever, in a tumultuous year hit by new COVID-19 variants and supply
chain shortages. The Dow added 18.7% for the
year and the tech-heavy Nasdaq
gained 21.4%. Advancing issues
outnumbered decliners on the NYSE by a 1.34-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 2.27-to-1
ratio favored advancers. The S&P 500
posted 20 new 52-week highs and no new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 89
new highs and 55 new lows.
Volume on U.S. exchanges was 10.00 billion shares, compared with the 10.36 billion average for the full session over the last 20 trading days.
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