Los Angeles Times

Bargain hunters swoop in after recent volatility

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A broad rally on Wall Street pushed stocks higher Thursday, giving the Standard & Poor’s 500 index 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%, its biggest gain since mid-October. The Dow Jones industrial average rose 1.8%, its best showing since early March. The techheavy Nasdaq composite rose 0.8%, 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% higher.

The market rebound comes as investors try to gauge the amount of damage the Omicron variant of the coronaviru­s might inflict on the economy, as well as measures that the U.S. and other government­s are taking to restrain it. Despite the latest gains, every major index is on track for a weekly loss.

The recent heavy selling may have presented too tempting an opportunit­y for traders, said Jay Hatfield, chief executive 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% on Wednesday before skidding and closing 1.2% lower.

The Dow advanced 617.75 points to 34,639.79. The Nasdaq jumped 127.27 points to 15,381.32. The Russell 2000 picked up 58.91 points, ending at 2,206.33.

The latest coronaviru­s variant has led some 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 probably will remain jumpy until investors have more informatio­n on how contagious the new variant is and how well current vaccines will hold up against it.

More than 90% of companies in the S&P 500 index rose Thursday. Banks and other financial companies accounted for a big slice of the gains. Bank of America rose 2.9% and American Express rose 4.5%.

Technology companies also rose, but the gains were crimped by a 0.6% drop from Apple after the iPhone maker reportedly warned suppliers that it is seeing weak demand ahead of the holiday season.

Bond yields rose. The yield on the 10-year Treasury rose to 1.44% from 1.43% late Wednesday.

U.S. crude oil prices rose 1.4%. The Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and allied oil-producing nations decided Thursday to stick to their plans to boost output via steady, modest monthly increases in oil releases, even as the Omicron variant adds more uncertaint­y over the global economic recovery from the pandemic. Energy companies gained ground. Chevron rose 2.7%.

Travel-related companies, which got hammered earlier this week as worries about the new coronaviru­s variant swept markets, rebounded Thursday. American Airlines climbed 7%, while Delta Air Lines rose 9.3%. Cruise line operators Carnival and Norwegian Cruise Line jumped 9.2% and 7.7%, respective­ly.

Several companies made outsized gains on a mix of corporate news. Supermarke­t chain Kroger jumped 11% for the biggest gain in the S&P 500 after raising its profit forecast for the year. Software maker Synopsys gained 4.5% after also giving investors an encouragin­g profit forecast.

Boeing rose 7.5% after China’s aviation regulator cleared the airplane maker’s 737 Max to return to flying with technical upgrades.

Southeast Asia’s largest ride-hailing company, Grab, fell 20.5% in its market debut Thursday, after a $40-billion merger in a special purpose acquisitio­n company deal.

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