Las Vegas Review-Journal

Markets have best day since September

Big rebound comes as investors keep an eye on COVID variant

- By Damian J. Troise and Alex Veiga

A broad rally on Wall

Street pushed stocks higher Thursday, giving the S&P 500 its best day in seven weeks as the market recouped some of its losses after several days of volatile trading.

The benchmark index rose 1.4 percent, its biggest gain since mid-october. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 1.8 percent, its best showing since early March. The tech-heavy Nasdaq rose 0.8 percent, held back in part by a modest drop in Apple.

Smaller company stocks, which have lost the most ground this week, outpaced the broader market, sending the Russell 2000 index 2.7 percent higher.

The market rebound comes as investors try to gauge the amount of damage the omicron variant of COVID-19 might inflict on the economy, as well as measures that the U.S. and other government­s are taking to restrain it. Trading has been choppy all week and, despite the latest gains, every major index is on track for a weekly loss.

The heavy selling in recent days may have presented too tempting an opportunit­y for traders, said Jay Hatfield, CEO of Infrastruc­ture Capital Advisors.

“It’s bargain-hunting after an overreacti­on,” Hatfield said. “Clearly the Fed and the variant are overhangin­g on the market, but the fundamenta­ls are very strong and the Fed is still injecting liquidity into the market.”

The S&P 500 rose 64.06 points to 4,577.10. The index has been on a roller coaster ride throughout the week. It was up as much as 1.9 percent Wednesday before skidding and closing 1.2 percent lower.

The Dow gained 617.75 points to 34,639.79. The Nasdaq added 127.27 points to 15,381.32. The Russell 2000 picked up 58.91 points to 2,206.33.

The latest coronaviru­s variant has led countries to impose barriers to travel and stricter restrictio­ns on business and people. Concerns about global restrictio­ns potentiall­y crimping economic growth butted up against concerns about rising inflation this week. The persistenc­e of rising inflation has prompted the Federal Reserve to consider withdrawin­g stimulus measures sooner than expected.

Wall Street will likely remain jumpy until investors have more informatio­n on how contagious the new variant is and how well current vaccines will hold up against it.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States