Business World

Mega-caps rally pushes S&P 500 to first close above 5,000 milestone

- Reuters

S&P 500 closed above 5,000 for the first time on Friday and Nasdaq briefly traded above 16,000, with boosts from mega-caps and chip stocks, including Nvidia as investors bet on artificial intelligen­ce (AI) technology and eyed strong earnings data.

Nvidia finished up 3.6% and hit a record high after Reuters reported it was building a new business unit focused on designing bespoke chips for cloud computing firms and others, including advanced AI processors.

This was after the Wall Street Journal reported Thursday that OpenAI Chief Executive Sam Altman was in talks with investors to raise funds for a tech initiative intended to boost chip-building capacity for power AI, among other things.

“The AI story so far has been all about building the infrastruc­ture, the chips, the data centers,” said David Lefkowitz, head of US equities at UBS Global Wealth Management, adding that the report “at least underscore­s that there’s potentiall­y a tremendous amount of demand going forward for AI infrastruc­ture.”

While Mr. Lefkowitz said the S&P and Nasdaq’s round number milestones likely won’t change investors calculatio­ns of the markets risk and reward prospects, he said, “it raises the profile of what’s happening in the market.”

With results in from about two-thirds of S&P 500 companies, the London Stock Exchange Group data now shows Wall Street estimates for fourth-quarter earnings growth of 9% versus expectatio­ns for 4.7% growth on Jan. 1 while 81% of companies are beating estimates, compared with a 76% average in the previous four reporting periods.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 54.64 points or 0.14% to 38,671.69; the S&P 500 gained 28.70 points or 0.57 % to 5,026.61; and the Nasdaq Composite gained 196.95 points or 1.25 % to 15,990.66.

Positive earnings and the boost from AI optimism has helped the S&P 500 to notch 10 intraday record highs so far this year.

The Nasdaq closed just 0.4% below its 16,057.44 record closing high registered in November 2021.

For the week, all three indexes registered their fifth straight weekly gain with the S&P adding 1.4%, the Nasdaq rising 2.3%, and the Dow climbing 0.04%.

Earlier, data showed US monthly consumer prices rose less than initially estimated in December, but underlying inflation remained a tad warm — a mixed picture that clouded expectatio­ns on the timing of interest-rate cuts from the US Federal Reserve.

Strong economic data and hawkish comments from Fed policy makers in recent days have dashed hopes the central bank would start cutting interest rates in March.

But Tim Ghriskey, senior portfolio strategist at Ingalls & Snyder in New York, New York, points to Fed official prediction­s in the “dot-plot,” which still imply a rate cut this year.

“The market does have the Fed’s wind at its back. Seemingly we’ve reached the top of interest rates. The next move is going to down. We don’t know when that’s going to be. The Fed keeps throwing cold water on that idea but their votes with the dots say they’re going to be easing in the second half.”

Market participan­ts are awaiting data on January consumer prices next week for more clues on when the Fed will cut borrowing costs.

In individual stocks, Cloudflare rallied 19.5% as it forecast upbeat first-quarter revenue and profit. But PepsiCo fell 3.6% after its fourth-quarter revenue fell short of estimates as multiple price increases crimped demand for its juices and Lay’s crisps.

Pinterest shares sank 9.5% after it forecast first-quarter revenue largely below Wall Street estimates.

Advancing issues outnumbere­d decliners by a 2-to-1 ratio on the New York Stock Exchange with 456 new highs and 64 new lows.

On the Nasdaq 2,960 issues advanced and 1,300 declined with advancing issues outnumberi­ng decliners by a 2.3-to-1 ratio.

The S&P 500 posted 47 new 52-week highs and four new lows, while the Nasdaq recorded 312 new highs and 91 new lows. —

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