East Bay Times

S&P 500 daily win streak hits 7 straight

Jobs report boosts investor confidence in the economy

- By Damian J. Troise and Stan Choe

NEW YORK >> U.S. stocks pushed further into record heights on Friday following an encouragin­g report on hiring across the country, though trading was shaky as the bond market was hit with another day of sharp swings.

The S&P 500 rose 17.47, or 0.4%, to 4,697.53 and clinched an all-time high for the seventh straight day. The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 203.72, or 0.6%, to 36,327.95, and the Nasdaq composite added 31.28, or 0.2%, to 15,971.59.

Trading was scattersho­t, though, and after climbing to an early gain of 0.8%, the S&P 500 at one point gave up virtually all of it. Stocks retrenched in the middle of the day as Treasury yields surprising­ly slumped. A measure of nervousnes­s in the stock market also made a U-turn higher around the same time.

The 10-year yield, which tends to move with expectatio­ns for the economy and inflation, dropped to 1.45% and is near its lowest level since September. It was at 1.58% just two days earlier. Analysts had varying explanatio­ns for that and other sharp moves in the bond market, which some called counterint­uitive.

The Dow and Nasdaq neverthele­ss still joined the S&P 500 in setting all-time highs. The smaller stocks in the Russell 2000 performed even better, jumping 1.4%

An encouragin­g report from Pfizer helped to lift the market, particular­ly companies that most need daily life to return to normal from the pandemic. Pfizer rose 10.9% after it said its experiment­al pill sharply cut rates of hospitaliz­ation and death for COVID-19 patients. Airlines, casinos, cruise lines and live-event companies had similar jumps.

The headline report of the day was the one from the Labor Department that showed employers hired a net 531,000 workers in October. That was more than 100,000 above economists’ expectatio­ns. The gains were widespread across industries, and the government also revised higher the numbers for job growth in earlier months.

One potential worry spot for markets was a big jump in workers’ wages, up 4.9% from a year earlier, which can feed into concerns about inflation. But the numbers were relatively in line

with economists’ expectatio­ns.

“It was one of those Goldilocks reports,” said Nate Thooft, head of global asset allocation at Manulife Investment Management. Besides showing strongerth­an-expected hiring, “the simple reality was it wasn’t showing any overheatin­g either.”

That’s why it was surprising that the 10-year Treasury yield fell so sharply to 1.44% from 1.52% late Thursday.

One possible reason was that investors see more people heading back to work as helping to clear the supply-chain bottleneck­s that have hit the economy and driven up inflation, said Brian Jacobsen, senior investment strategist at All spring Global Investment­s. That could lead to lowered expectatio­ns for inflation, which would add downward pressure on Treasury yields.

“The more people we get back to fill open positions will help keep that shortage pressure at bay a little bit,” said Matt Stucky, senior portfolio manager at Northweste­rn Mutual Wealth Management Co.

But the degree of moves in the bond market still took market watchers by surprise.

“Some of these moves look extreme to me,” Allspring Global Investment’s Jacobsen acknowledg­ed, citing a sharp drop for the 30-year Treasury yield to 1.88% from 1.96%. “I don’t think we can justify where yields are. It leads me to believe that this is some rather rapid reposition­ing by traders in the market and not necessaril­y a change in the trend.”

A day earlier, bond markets around the world shook after the Bank of England decided not to raise interest rates. Many investors had thought it was nearly a sure thing, and the inaction sent yields sliding.

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