Houston Chronicle

Tech stocks gain as state lockdowns widen

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Wall Street capped a day of choppy trading with modest gains for stocks Thursday, as the market’s tug of war continues between worries about the worsening pandemic in the present and optimism that a vaccine will rescue the economy in the future.

The S&P 500 rose 0.4 percent after spending much of the day flipping between small losses and gains. The benchmark index was coming off a 1.2 percent slide from the day before that pulled it away from its record of 3,626.91 set on Monday. The late-afternoon burst of buying erased nearly all of the S&P 500’s losses for the week.

Technology companies accounted formuch of the rebound. Companies that rely on consumer spending and communicat­ions stocks also helped lift the market, outweighin­g losses in the utilities and health care sectors. Treasury yields fell, a sign of caution in the market.

The S&P 500 gained 14.08 points to 3,581.87. The Dow Jones Industrial Average added 44.81 points, or 0.2 percent, to 29,483.23. The index had been down 210 points. The tech-heavy Nasdaq composite climbed 103.11 points, or 0.9 percent, to11,904.71.

Small-company stocks had a good showing. The Russell 2000 index picked up 14.82 points, or 0.8 percent, 1,784.13.

Wall Street’s huge November rally has slowed this week as fears about the economy buckling in the near term collide with hopes that stronger growth will arrive next year once effective coronaviru­s vaccines become available. A discouragi­ng report Thursday underscore­d the fears, showing that more U.S. workers filed for unemployme­nt benefits last week than the week before. It was a worse number than economists expected and the first increase in five weeks.

With infections and hospitaliz­ations on the rise across much of the country, governors and mayors are grudgingly issuing mask mandates, limiting the size of gatherings, banning indoor restaurant dining, closing gyms and restrictin­g the hours and capacity of other businesses.

“Good vaccine news is battling worsening coronaviru­s trends,” said Ross Mayfield, investment strategist at Baird. “We’re at this point where you have the endgame in sight, but the path to get there looks really murky.”

Investors worry the moves and the worsening pandemic that caused them will hurt corporate profits and shake confidence among consumers, keeping them hunkered at home. New York City’s announceme­nt that it’s halting in-person learning at public schools helped send stocks on their late-day slide Wednesday.

Democrats and Republican­s in Washington, meanwhile, are still stymied in their attempts to deliver another dose of financial support to workers and businesses. That has the specter of a bleak winter looming for both the health care system and economy.

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