Dayton Daily News

S&P, Dow soar to record highs

Trade fears ease as tariff, currency moves could reduce tensions.

- By Vildana Hajric

U.S. stock benchmarks reached new highs Thursday on news from China about tariff and currency moves that could ease trade tensions. Treasury yields remained near their highest level this year. The dollar slid.

The S&P 500 Index soared to a record close — led by the technology, health-care and financial sectors — lodging its biggest gain in over a month.

The Dow Jones industrial average also reached a new pinnacle, with 28 of 30 constituen­ts flashing green. Most European and Asian shares also gained.

Trade conflicts that had stocks gyrating early in the week have since cooled off.

China is said to be planning to cut the average tariff rate it charges on imports from the majority of its trading partners as soon as next month.

On Wednesday, Premier Li Keqiang said his government wouldn’t devalue the currency in order to boost its exports amid the trade war.

The yield on 10-year Treasuries held above 3 percent, near its high for the year.

The greenback weakened after a report said the U.S. and Canada are unlikely to reach a deal on NAFTA in Washington this week; jobless data was solid but did little to change the mood. The pound surged after August retail sales came in higher than expected.

“The dollar has generally strengthen­ed on tariff fears, especially against EM currencies,” said Pravit Chintawong­vanich, an equity derivative­s strategist at Wells Fargo Securities. “What you’re seeing today is the opposite of that. EM equities and DM equities ex-U.S. are catching up. Today is a continuati­on of the risk-on theme we’ve seen in the last couple days.”

Equity markets have so far remained resilient in the face of rising bond yields, suggesting investors are comfortabl­e with the outlook for corporate earnings and global growth even as borrowing costs rise along with trade tensions.

Ahead of the Fed meeting next week some other central banks topped the agenda on Thursday, with Norway’s policy makers raising interest rates for the first time in seven years as the SNB kept deposit rates unchanged.

Elsewhere, emerging-market assets continued to rally off the lows seen earlier this month.

West Texas crude dropped after President Donald Trump resumed his criticism of OPEC on Twitter.

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