Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Stocks close higher as banks, technology lead broad rally

- By Damian J. Troise and Alex Veiga

A choppy day of trading on Wall Street ended Thursday with stocks broadly higher and another all-time high for the Dow Jones Industrial Average.

Banks and technology companies led a late-afternoon turnaround that pushed the S&P 500 to a 0.8% gain, reversing the benchmark index’s losses for the week. Gains in most Dow companies, including Goldman Sachs, IBM and Cisco Systems, nudged the blue chip index to a new high for the second straight day.

Apple, Microsoft and Intel were among the winners, contributi­ng to the rally in tech stocks. That helped the S&P 500’s technology sector break a sevenday losing streak, which reversed an early slide in the Nasdaq.

The stock indexes wavered earlier in the day, weighed down by a sell-off in health care stocks. Drugmakers Moderna and Pfizer closed lower following news late Wednesday that the White House supports waiving intellectu­al property rights for COVID0-19 vaccines in order to speed up immunizati­ons in poorer countries.

Investors continued to weigh the latest corporate earnings reports while looking ahead to a key jobs report due out Friday.

“We’re getting to the end of earnings season and numbers are coming in typically ahead of expectatio­ns,” said Tom Hainlin, national investment strategist at U.S. Bank Wealth Management. “The outlook for the year looks like it’s OK. That’s the basis for an upward-trending market.”

The S&P 500 bounced back from an early slide, adding 34.03 points to 4,201.62. The index is on track for its eighth weekly gain in the past 10 weeks. The Dow rose 318.19 points, or 0.9%, to 34,548.19. The Nasdaq Composite climbed 50.42 points, or 0.4%, to 13,632.84. The tech-heavy index had been down 1.1% in the early going.

The Russell 2000 index of smaller companies also recovered from a stumble to an essentiall­y flat finish, adding 0.05 points, or less than 0.1%, to 2,241.42.

Bond yields were mixed, with the 10-year Treasury note trading at a yield of 1.57%, down from 1.58% late Wednesday.

Some healthcare stocks fell after news late Wednesday that the White House supports waiving intellectu­al property rights for coronaviru­s vaccines to help immunize poorer countries faster. That slide was countered by gains in household goods makers, banks and communicat­ion companies.

Moderna lost 1.4% after the company reported its first-ever quarterly profit, helped by the company’s coronaviru­s vaccine. The drop was largely tied to the news from the White House, as shares of other drug companies fell, including Pfizer, which dropped 1%.

Shares of Johnson & Johnson were not hurt by the news, partly because J&J has other businesses like Band-Aids, the pain reliever Tylenol and its baby products franchise. The stock inched up 0.4%

Stocks have mostly pushed higher on expectatio­ns of an economic recovery and strong profits this year. Massive support from the U.S. government and the Federal Reserve, and increasing­ly positive economic data, have also encouraged investors to push stock prices to all-time highs, despite an undercurre­nt of worry about inflation and the potential for higher interest rates later this year.

This week, the focus is on the health of the labor market, with the government due to report April hiring data Friday. Job growth has been one of the keys to a sustained economic rebound, but it has lagged other areas of the economy such as retail sales and consumer confidence.

“Continued job gains through the year are going to be important to continue to move things ahead,” said James Ragan, director of wealth management research at D.A. Davidson.

Economists expect the April jobs data to show employers hired 975,000 workers last month as the economy accelerate­d out of the pandemic and vaccines rolled out nationwide. The unemployme­nt rate is expected to drop to 5.8% from 6%.

There have already been signs that the labor market is improving. The Labor Department said Thursday that the number of Americans who filed for unemployme­nt benefits last week fell to a pandemic low of 498,000. The payroll processing company ADP said Wednesday that private employers hired 742,000 workers last month.

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