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Stocks up as banks, industrial companies recover

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Stocks were edging higher on Wednesday, helped by a recovery in banks and industrial stocks. Bond yields were steady after rising earlier this week.

Investors had their eye on Washington, where Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell and Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen spoke before the Senate about the government’s efforts to combat the economic impact of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The S&P 500 index was up 0.3 percent as of 2:04 p.m. Eastern. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 246 points, or 0.8 percent, to 32,668. The Nasdaq Composite fell 0.7 percent.

Bank stocks, which took a beating on Tuesday, were among the best performers. Banks have been volatile the last couple of weeks as investors try to gauge the impact of higher interest rates on the U.S. economy. Higher interest rates can slow economic momentum, but they also allow banks to charge more for loans.

Bank of America rose 1.1 percent and JPMorgan Chase added 1.6 percent.

Technology stocks were modestly lower, pulling the technology-heavy Nasdaq down compared to the other indexes. Apple was down 1 percent, while Facebook fell 2 percent.

GameStop sank 19.8 percent after reporting results that missed Wall Street’s forecasts, though the stock is still up nearly eightfold since the beginning of the year after it became a social media darling for a swarm of online investors. The company took no questions from investors on its quarterly conference call late Tuesday.

The pandemic remains a dominant topic for investors. Stocks fell on Tuesday after Germany, Europe’s biggest economy, and the Netherland­s extended lockdowns and imposed new travel and busipotent­ial ness curbs in response to spikes in infection. That followed similar moves earlier by Italy and France.

“There’s a feeling that we’re not quite done with COVID-19 yet at all,“said Brad McMillan, chief investment officer for Commonweal­th Financial Network. “That, combined with other concerns, is creating a lot of uncertaint­y.”

The bond market was relatively quiet for a change. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note fell slightly to 1.62 percent. It had been as high as 1.74 percent last week, which caused the stock market to go into selling mode.

Bond yields have risen this year as traders have been watching the for inflation pressures to pick up after struggling economies were flooded with credit and government spending. That has depressed U.S. bond prices, prompting some to shift money out of stocks.

While rising interest rates are a key concern, investors are still juggling worries about the speed of vaccine distributi­on, COVID-19 cases and the potential for future tax changes crimping corporate profits, McMillan said.

“There’s no central narrative that’s moving the market in one direction,” he said. “Smaller waves have the potential to rock the market back and forth.”

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