Los Angeles Times

Wall Street ends higher after 7 weeks of losses

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Stocks closed higher Monday, an upbeat start to the week on Wall Street after seven weeks of declines that nearly ended the bull market that began in March 2020.

The Standard & Poor’s 500 rose 1.9%, with technology and financial sector stocks doing much of the heavy lifting for the benchmark index. The Dow Jones industrial average added 2%, and the Nasdaq composite gained 1.6%.

The recent heavy selling on the market has primed traders to snap up big tech stocks and shares in other companies that had been high fliers before the market’s punishing skid, said Quincy Krosby, chief equity strategist for LPL Financial.

“What we’re seeing today is traders and investors coming in and taking advantage of the lower [price] levels,” she said. “This is the tug-of-war in the market between those saying the market has become attractive­ly valued, versus those who are saying ‘not really,’ because it’s not factoring in much slower growth.”

The S&P 500 gained 72.39 points to 3,973.75. The Dow rose 618.34 points to 31,880.24, and the tech-heavy Nasdaq picked up 180.66 points to close at 11,535.27.

Smaller company stocks also staged a rally. The Russell 2000 rose 19.50 points, or 1.1%, to 1,792.76.

Lingering concerns about inflation have been weighing on the market and have kept major indexes in a slump. The S&P 500 is coming off its longest weekly losing streak since the dot-com bubble was deflating in 2001. It came close to falling 20% from its peak earlier this year, which would put the index at the heart of most workers’ 401(k) accounts into a bear market.

Inflation’s effect on consumers and businesses has been the key worry for markets, along with the Federal Reserve’s attempt to temper that effect by aggressive­ly raising interest rates. Inflation brought on by a big supply and demand disconnect has worsened because of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and its effect on energy prices. Supply chains were further hurt by China’s recent series of lockdowns for several major cities facing rising COVID-19 cases.

Meanwhile, a series of disappoint­ing earnings reports from key retailers last week raised concerns that consumers are spending less on a wide range of goods.

Investors are worried that the central bank could go too far in raising rates or move too quickly, which could stunt economic growth and potentiall­y bring on a recession.

On Wednesday, investors will get a more detailed glimpse into the Fed’s decision-making process with the release of minutes from the latest policy-setting meeting.

Banks made strong gains along with rising bond yields, which they rely on to charge more lucrative interest on loans. The yield on the 10-year Treasury rose to 2.86% from 2.77% late Friday. Bank of America rose 5.9%.

Technology stocks also did some heavy lifting. Apple rose 4% and Microsoft gained 3.2%.

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