Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Tech firms power rally in stocks

Upbeat investors await first comments from new Fed chief

- ERIC J. WEINER AND SARAH PONCZEK

U.S. stocks rose to a nearly four-week high Monday as continuing gains in Treasuries pushed yields further below 2.9 percent, alleviatin­g investor angst that higher rates will accelerate fiscal tightening. Oil climbed with gold.

The S&P 500 index gained for a third day, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average climbed to its highest level in almost a month, buoyed by strength in technology and financial shares. Volume was lower than usual as investors await the first public comments from Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell today. The 10-year yield fell for a third straight day, reaching a two-week low. The dollar was little changed.

The S&P 500 gained 32.30 points, or 1.2 percent, to 2,779.60, with telecoms and technology stocks leading the way. For the second straight day, the market turned higher as the day wore on. That’s an encouragin­g sign to investors who see the last hour of trading as being dominated by profession­al traders — the socalled smart money.

The Dow rose 399.28, or 1.6 percent, to 25,709.27, and the Nasdaq composite gained 84.07, or 1.1 percent, to 7,421.46. All three indexes are back within 3.4 percent of their record highs.

“There was a lot of talk from various Federal Reserve related folks last week and that provided to a certain extent a sense of calm that we won’t see rates spike in the second

half of this year,” said Matt Schreiber, president and chief investment strategist at New Jersey-based WBI Investment­s. “The market freaked out when they thought Jerome Powell might raise rates faster than expected — his first comments are eagerly anticipate­d here.”

Powell may help set a new direction for investors at a time when some of the biggest names in markets are at odds over the implicatio­ns of this month’s surge in U.S. bond yields. Morgan Stanley put out

a bullish call on Treasuries on Monday, countering warnings on the securities from Goldman Sachs Group and Warren Buffett.

“I think you can very confidentl­y say the worst is over for now,” said Randy Frederick, vice president of trading and derivative­s at the Schwab Center for Financial Research. “The concern I have is that it’s recovering too quickly. Today’s rally has been very surprising.”

Frederick said he saw few reasons for a big move higher in stocks on Monday, with no big-ticket earnings or economic reports on the calendar. If the market continues rising at this

rate, it could hit record heights again in the next couple of weeks. “And then we’d be vulnerable to another correction, so I’d prefer it to slow down a bit here,” Frederick said.

What triggered the first correction, which is what traders call a 10 percent drop in stock prices, was fear that interest rates are set to march much higher, and quickly. Treasury yields have been climbing over the last month for a range of reasons, including higher expectatio­ns for inflation, a strengthen­ing U.S. economy and the U.S. government’s increased need to borrow.

“Investors are starting to

realize and understand that this former low-rate, low-inflation environmen­t is evolving,” Erik Knutzen, multi-asset class chief investment officer at Neuberger Berman Group, said by phone. “Rates are going to higher levels, inflation is going to higher levels, and as long as rates and inflation, and to a certain extent the dollar, don’t move too far too fast, then this can continue to be a reasonably good environmen­t for equities and for credit.”

Overseas, the Stoxx 600 index reached its highest level in three weeks. The pound and euro fluctuated, and Russia’s ruble appreciate­d the most

among emerging market currencies after S&P Global Ratings boosted its credit score to investment grade.

Meanwhile, Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda said the central bank has no plan to overhaul its current form of easing, adding that he saw no need to do another comprehens­ive assessment of the effectiven­ess of the bank’s policies. Oil futures edged lower after Saudi Oil Minister Khalid Al-Falih said OPEC and its allies may ease output curbs in 2019 in a way that won’t disturb the market. Bitcoin erased its decline and broke above $10,000.

 ?? Bloomberg/MICHAEL NAGLE ?? Pedestrian­s pass in front of Innovator Capital Management’s sign outside the New York Stock Exchange on Monday. U.S. stocks rose on renewed gains in Treasuries.
Bloomberg/MICHAEL NAGLE Pedestrian­s pass in front of Innovator Capital Management’s sign outside the New York Stock Exchange on Monday. U.S. stocks rose on renewed gains in Treasuries.

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