The day started 300 points down on the Dow but after 10 a.m. it was a straight up trajectory to end the day with a whopping 435 point gain, which means the trajectory for the entire day was some 735 points. Everyone is trying to figure out whether the worst of the great 2022 selloff is over. Today’s Fed Vice Chair lent a little encouragement in backing two more ½ point rate hikes in June and July but no pause in September unless inflation has cooled. This was slightly better than yesterday’s Fed governor who wanted monthly rate hikes until further notice. With its recent gains, the S&P is now down just 13% from its January high and a marked decrease in payrolls suggests that labor demand is finally starting to slow which is good news for inflation. But the government’s labor report due on Friday will tell the larger story with a forecast for 325,000 new jobs. Volume was much lighter than usual at 10.7 billion.
Thu 6-2-22 June 2, 2022
4:23 PM
Wall
Street ends sharply higher, led by Tesla and Nvidia
By Noel Randewich and Anisha Sircar
DJ: 32,813.23 -176.89 NAS: 11,994.46 -86.93 S&P: 4,101.23 -30.92 6/1
DJ: 33,248.28 +435.05 NAS: 12,316.90 +322.44 S&P: 4,176.82
+75.59 6/2
June 2 (Reuters) - Wall Street ended
sharply higher on Thursday, led by Tesla, Nvidia and other megacap growth
stocks in a choppy session ahead of a key jobs report due on Friday. Tesla (TSLA.O),
Nvidia (NVDA.O) and Meta Platforms (FB.O) each
rose more than 4%, fueling gains in the S&P 500 and Nasdaq. Amazon (AMZN.O) rallied
3.1% and Apple (AAPL.O) added 1.7%. Of the 11 S&P 500 sector indexes, 10
rose, led by Consumer Discretionary (.SPLRCD),
up 3.03%, followed by a 2.69% gain in Materials (.SPLRCM). U.S. stocks recovered from a drop earlier in
the day after Federal Reserve Vice Chair Lael Brainard said she backs at least
a couple more half percentage point interest rate hikes, and sees little case
for pausing rate hikes in September if price pressures fail to cool. read
more
The U.S. stock market has staged a
modest recovery in recent sessions, with investors debating whether the worst
of a selloff that has dominated Wall Street in 2022 may be over.
"Volatility
has become the norm, not the exception. Stocks are being held hostage by
inflation, and until inflation gets under control, volatility is likely to
remain high," warned Terry Sandven, chief equity strategist at U.S. Bank
Wealth Management in Minneapolis, Minnesota.
The S&P 500 is
now down about 13% from its record high close in early January.
The Philadelphia Semiconductor
index (.SOX) jumped 3.6% to end at its highest level in almost a
month.
U.S. private payrolls increased far less than expected
in May, suggesting demand
for labor was starting to slow amid higher interest rates and tightening
financial conditions, the ADP National Employment report showed. read more All
eyes are now on the government's nonfarm payrolls data on Friday, with investors looking for fresh signs of the
U.S. economy's health and how aggressively the Fed may continue to raise
interest rates. Analysts are expecting the economy to have added 325,000 jobs last month.
Unofficially,
the S&P 500 climbed
1.84% to end the session at 4,176.82 points.
The Nasdaq gained 2.69% to 12,316.90 points, while Dow Jones Industrial
Average rose 1.33% to 33,248.28 points.
Microsoft (MSFT.O)rose 0.8%, even after the software maker
cut its fourth-quarter forecast for profit and revenue, making it the latest
U.S. company to warn of a hit from a stronger U.S. dollar. read more
Hewlett Packard Enterprise Co (HPE.N)slid 5.2% after the technology firm gave
a disappointing full-year forecast due to currency headwinds and its exit from
Russia. Veeva Systems (VEEV.N) rallied almost 15% after the life
sciences software seller's quarterly revenue forecast beat expectations. Ford Motor Co (F.N) rose 2.5% after the automaker said it plans to
invest $3.7 billion in assembly plants in Michigan, Ohio and Missouri. read more
Across the U.S. stock market (.AD.US), advancing stocks outnumbered falling
ones by a 3.5-to-one ratio. The S&P
500 posted one new high and 29 new lows; the Nasdaq recorded 33 new highs and
107 new lows.
Volume on U.S. exchanges was relatively light, with 10.7 billion shares
traded, compared with an average of 13.3 billion shares over the previous 20
sessions.
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