It was a shot straight up today with the Dow up about 250 points right out the gate and just continued climbing to close up 346 points, as with all the other indexes. This was the second day of euphoric buying on the speculation that the July rate hike due in a couple weeks will only be ½ point instead of ¾. This was further validated today, which explains the buying spree, by Fed Governor Christopher Waller who took a less hawkish tone in calling fears of a recession overblown and advocating for a ½ point hike in September, taken as a cue by some to add to positions. The risk to the downside is now considered minimal compared to the potential to the upside, today anyway. All eyes are on tomorrow’s employment report, expected to add 268,000 jobs in June. Volume was again considerably below average at just under 10.5 billion.
Thu July 7, 2022 4:34
PM
S&P,
Nasdaq end higher as July hot streak continues
By David French
DJ: 31,037.68 +69.86 NAS: 11,361.85 +39.61 S&P: 3,845.08 +13.69 7/6
DJ: 31,384.55 +346.87 NAS: 11,621.35 +259.49 S&P: 3,902.62
+57.54 7/7
NEW YORK, July 7 (Reuters) - Wall Street
benchmarks ended up on Thursday, with the S&P 500 and Nasdaq recording
their fourth successive higher closes, as traders leaned in to U.S. equities
after the Federal Reserve hinted at a more tempered program of interest rate
hikes. U.S. stock markets have
stabilized in July after a brutal selloff in the first half against the
backdrop of a surge in inflation, the Ukraine conflict and the Fed's pivot away
from easy-money policy. The S&P 500
index (.SPX) has
closed higher in each of the first four sessions so far this month, after
recording its steepest first-half percentage drop since 1970. The benchmark has
not had five successive gains so far in 2022.
Minutes from the central bank's June
policy meeting, where the Fed raised interest rates by three-quarters of a
percentage point, showed on Wednesday a firm restatement of its intent to get
prices under control. read more However,
Fed officials acknowledged
the risk of rate increases having a "larger-than-anticipated" impact
on economic growth and judged that an increase of 50 or 75 basis points
would likely be appropriate at the policy meeting in July. The less hawkish tone was echoed in comments from Fed
Governor Christopher Waller
on Thursday. In calling fears of a U.S. recession overblown, he advocated for a
50 basis-point hike in September. read more Such
sentiment was taken as a
cue by some to add positions, including in high-growth stocks, which had
suffered in the first half of 2022 as investors fretted over their prospects in
a rising interest rate environment.
This
benefited tech names big and small, with heavyweights Tesla Inc (TSLA.O) up 5.5% and Google parent Alphabet
Inc (GOOGL.O) rising 3.7%, and Affirm Holdings
Inc (AFRM.O) and Avalara Inc (AVLR.N) gaining, respectively, 17.1% and
16.4%. "It's starting to feel like real money is starting to come
back," said Louis Ricci, head trader at Emles Advisors. "There's no reason that the market
cannot go down another 30%, but we think the risk is 30% to the downside but three to four times that
to the upside."
Though
investors widely expect the Fed to hike rates by another 75 basis points in
July, expectations of peak terminal rate next year have come down significantly
amid growing worries of a global economic slowdown. Fed funds futures traders are pricing for the
benchmark rate to peak at 3.44% in March. Expectations before the June meeting
were that it would increase to around 4% by May. It is currently 1.58%. , .
Elsewhere, a report on Thursday showed
the number of Americans
filing new claims for unemployment benefits unexpectedly rose last week
and demand for labor is
slowing with layoffs surging to a 16-month high in June. read
more A closely watched employment report on Friday is expected to
show nonfarm payrolls
likely increased by 268,000 jobs last month after rising by 390,000 in
May.
The
Dow Jones Industrial Average (.DJI) rose
346.87 points, or 1.12%, to 31,384.55, the S&P 500 (.SPX) gained
57.54 points, or 1.50%, to 3,902.62 and the Nasdaq Composite (.IXIC) added
259.49 points, or 2.28%, to 11,621.35. Almost all of the
S&P subsectors were higher, with the energy index's (.SPNY) 3.5% gain making it the best
performer as oil and gas companies followed the rebound in crude prices from
the previous day's 12-week low.
The Philadelphia SE Semiconductor
index (.SOX) climbed 4.5% after South Korea's Samsung
Electronics (005930.KS) turned in its best second-quarter
profit since 2018, driven by strong sales of memory chips.
Volume on U.S. exchanges was 10.47
billion shares, compared
with the 13.08 billion average for the full session over the last 20 trading
days.
The
S&P 500 posted 2 new 52-week highs and 29 new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded
24 new highs and 57 new lows.
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