Houston Chronicle

Wall Street rallies ahead of a busy week

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Stocks notched broad gains Monday on Wall Street as investors looked ahead to Election Day and the potential for a turbulent stretch for markets.

The S&P 500 climbed 1.2 percent, recouping some of its losses from a sharp selloff last week, as more companies reported stronger profits for the summer than Wall Street feared and reports on manufactur­ing camein better than expected. Health care, industrial and financial companies drove much of the broad rally, which followed gains for European and Asian stocks following their own better-than-expected economic data.

Caution, though, was continuing to hang over markets as the pandemic raises worries that customers will stay away from businesses and pushes more European government­s to bring back restrictio­ns. Uncertaint­y about Tuesday’s U.S. elections is also weighing on markets, and Treasury yields were mixed.

“People are probably more than willing to hold off to see what happens tomorrow night,” said David Trainer, CEO of investment research firm New Constructs.

The S&P 500 rose 40.28 to 3,310.24. The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 423.45 points, or 1.6 percent, to 26,925.05. The Nasdaq composite picked up 46.02 points, or 0.4 percent, to 10,957.61. The index had been down 0.7 percent. Small company stocks fared better than the broader market. The Russell 2000 small-caps index rose 30.11 points, or 2 percent, to 1,568.59.

It’s an incredibly busy week for markets, with the Federal Reserve announcing its latest decision on interest rates Thursday, the U.S. Labor Department releasing its market-moving monthly jobs report on Friday and roughly 130 companies in the S&P 500 scheduled to report their results for the summer through the week.

Blaring above them all is Election Day. Markets have veered sharply in recent weeks as investors deal with uncertaint­y about who will control Washington, and what that means for the chances of the U.S. government delivering more aid for the economy.

Many profession­al investors say they plan to hold steady through whatever volatility the election creates. That’s because history shows politics don’t have a very strong correlatio­n with market returns over the longer term. But Wall Street is neverthele­ss girding for potentiall­y big swings in the interim.

The feared scenario for investors is a contested election, where it could take weeks for a winner of the White House to emerge. Markets famously hate uncertaint­y, and many along Wall Street expect stocks to drop in such a scenario.

Which party gets control of the Senate may be just as important as the presidency. If Democrats can gain complete control of Washington, many investors expect them to deliver a big dose of support for the economy.

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