Albany Times Union

Broad gains for stocks push S&P 500, Nasdaq to record highs

After suffering modest losses on Wednesday, market able to rebound

- By Damian J. Troise and Alex Veiga

A broad rally for stocks on Wall Street sent the S&P 500 and Nasdaq to new highs Thursday, as the market more than made up for modest losses a day earlier.

The S&P 500 rose 1 percent, posting its third all-time high this week. More than 80 percent of the stocks in the benchmark index closed higher. Technology stocks, banks and a mix of companies that rely on consumer spending accounted for much of the gains.

The Nasdaq rose 1.4 percent, nudging the tech-heavy index above its previous record high set Sept. 7. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.7 percent, leaving it just shy of the all-time high it set on Tuesday.

Smaller stocks outpaced the broader market in a sign that investors are more confident about economic growth. Bond yields ticked higher and energy futures were mixed.

The market’s latest milestones come as investors welcomed another encouragin­g batch of corporate earnings reports by companies such as Ford and Caterpilla­r. With a little over a third of S&P 500 companies having reported results for the July-september quarter so far, some 66 percent of them posted earnings and revenue that topped Wall Street’s estimates, according to S&P Global Market Intelligen­ce.

Low interest rates and growing company earnings are among reasons why investors remain in a buying mood, said Sameer Samana, senior global market strategist at Wells Fargo Investment Institute.

“If you look at the economic data and you look at earnings, even though we’re probably past what could be considered peak growth rates, they’re still growing at very healthy levels,” he said.

The S&P 500 index rose 44.74 points to 4,596.42. The index is on pace for its fourth straight weekly gain. The Dow gained 239.79 points to 35,730..48. The Nasdaq rose 212.28 points to 15,448.12.

The Russell 2000 index of small companies climbed 45.49 points, or 2 percent, to 2,297.98.

Technology stocks helped power a big slice of the S&P 500’s gains. KLA, which makes equipment for manufactur­ing semiconduc­tors, rose 4.3 percent after beating Wall Street’s fiscal first-quarter profit forecasts. Apple dropped 3.9 percent in after-hours trading after the company’s fiscal fourthquar­ter revenue fell short of Wall Street’s estimates. Amazon.com also fell 3.6 percent in after-hours trading after its third-quarter earnings missed analysts’ forecasts.

Bond yields edged higher. The yield on the 10-year Treasury rose to 1.57 percent from 1.53 percent. Banks, which rely on higher bond yields to charge more lucrative interest on loans, made solid gains. Bank of America rose 1.6 percent.

Ford jumped 8.7 percent after reporting earnings that easily beat analysts’ forecasts and raising its full-year outlook. Heavy equipment maker Caterpilla­r also rose 4.1 percent after turning in strong results.

The broader market has been gaining ground as the latest batch of corporate report cards show that companies fared well in the most recent quarter, despite a surge in COVID-19 cases and inflation worries weighing on the economic recovery.

“Right now, the market is saying I think six months from now the economy will be good, but not great,” said George Ball, chairman of financial services firm Sanders Morris Harris.

Outside of earnings, investors got a mixed bag of economic updates Thursday.

Hampered by rising COVID-19 cases and persistent supply shortages, the U.S. economy slowed sharply to a 2 percent annual growth rate in the July-september period, according to the Commerce Department. That marks the weakest quarterly expansion since the recovery from the pandemic recession began last year.

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