Los Angeles Times

Wall Street rallies again amid rough April

- By Stan Choe Choe writes for the Associated Press.

NEW YORK — U.S. stocks rallied for a second straight day Tuesday to blunt the blow of what’s been a rough April.

The Standard & Poor’s 500 index climbed 1.2% and pulled further out of the hole created by a six-day losing streak. The Dow Jones industrial average rose 263 points, or 0.7%, and the Nasdaq composite jumped 1.6%.

A weaker-than-expected report on U.S. business activity helped support the market, which remains in an awkward phase. The hope on Wall Street is for the economy to avoid a severe recession, but not to stay so hot that it keeps upward pressure on inflation.

The preliminar­y report from S&P Global released Tuesday seemed to hit that sweet spot. Treasury yields eased in the bond market, and stocks added to gains immediatel­y after its release.

A flood of earnings reports also dictated much of trading, highlighte­d by a slew of companies that topped analysts’ expectatio­ns.

GE Aerospace flew 8.3% higher after it raised its profit forecast for the full year, in addition to beating expectatio­ns for first-quarter earnings.

Kimberly-Clark gained 5.5% after the maker of Huggies, Kleenex and Kotex also raised its earnings forecast for the full year. General Motors revved up by 4.4% after citing sales of pickup trucks and other higherprof­it vehicles. Danaher rose 7.2% after pointing to strength in its bioprocess­ing and molecular diagnostic­s businesses.

They helped overshadow an 8.9% drop for Nucor after the steelmaker fell short of forecasts for both profit and revenue.

MSCI, whose investment indexes guide much of the industry, fell 13.4% after reporting weaker revenue growth than expected. Invesco sank 6.4% after falling short of expectatio­ns for both earnings and revenue.

JetBlue Airways lost 18.8% despite topping expectatio­ns for the latest quarter. Its forecasts for upcoming revenue came up short of what some analysts expected, and it said competitio­n in Latin America could weigh on its results.

All told, the S&P 500 rose 59.95 points to 5,070.55. The Dow gained 263.71 to 38,503.69, and the Nasdaq composite jumped 245.33 to 15,696.64.

The market’s main event may have arrived after trading finished for the day. Tesla reported its results for the first three months of the year, the first to do so among the “Magnificen­t Seven” stocks that accounted for most of last year’s gains for the S&P 500. Expectatio­ns are high for each of the Mag 7 after they rocketed to big gains in 2023, and they’ll need to at least match them to justify their prices.

Several had been leading the recent decline for the broader market, which saw the S&P 500 fall as much as 5.5% in April.

“This underscore­s the importance of earnings in the next two weeks, which will be dominated by the Mag 7, and the risk that disappoint­ing results may accelerate the sell-off,” Barclays strategist­s led by Stefano Pascale and Anshul Gupta said.

With skeptics calling the broad stock market too expensive, criticism would ease only if companies were to produce higher profits or if interest rates were to fall. The latter has been looking less likely.

Officials at the Federal Reserve warned last week that they may need to keep interest rates high for a while in order to ensure inf lation is heading down to their 2% target. That was a big letdown for financial markets, dousing hopes that had built after the Fed signaled earlier that three interest-rate cuts may come this year.

Lower rates had appeared to be on the horizon after inflation cooled last year. But a string of reports this year showing inflation has remained hotter than expected has raised worries about stalled progress.

That’s why Tuesday’s report suggesting a slowdown in growth for overall business activity across the U.S. was so welcomed. It could keep the door open for the Fed to cut interest rates the one or two times that many traders are forecastin­g.

The yield on the 10-year Treasury fell to 4.59% to relieve the pressure on stocks, particular­ly high-growth ones and those that pay high dividends. The 10-year yield had been at 4.64% just before the report’s release and at 4.61% late Monday.

The two-year Treasury yield, which moves more on expectatio­ns for Fed action, had a similar drop. It fell to 4.92% from 4.97% late Monday.

In stock markets abroad, indexes rose across much of Europe. They were mixed earlier in Asia. Stocks jumped 1.9% in Hong Kong but fell 0.7% in Shanghai.

 ?? ?? Major stock indexes Associated Press
Major stock indexes Associated Press

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