Miami Herald

Stocks rebound

- — ASSOCIATED PRESS

Stocks marched broadly higher on Wall Street on Wednesday, briefly nudging the S&P 500 above its alltime closing high set in February, before the coronaviru­s pandemic led to a historic market plunge.

The benchmark index notched a 1.4% gain, its eighth in nine days. It ended within 0.2% of its record high from Feb. 19, when the coronaviru­s seemed like only a far-away worry for Wall Street.

Big technology stocks led the way higher once again. Healthcare and communicat­ion services stocks also had a strong showing. The rally followed gains for stocks across Europe and much of Asia, while Treasury yields continued their sharp increase after a report on inflation came in higher than expected for the second straight day.

The S&P 500 rose 46.66 points (1.4%) to 3,380.35. The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 289.93 (1%) to 27,976.84. The Nasdaq composite, which is heavily weighted with technology stocks, climbed 229.42 (2.1%) to 11,012.24. The Russell 2000 index of smallcompa­ny stocks picked up 8.15 (0.5%) to 1,583.25.

The U.S. stock market is on the edge of erasing the last of the losses taken after the coronaviru­s pandemic crushed the economy into recession, even though the economy is still hobbling despite some recent improvemen­ts.

Much of the rebound has been due to massive amounts of support from the Federal Reserve, which has slashed interest rates to nearly zero and propped up far-ranging corners of the bond market to keep the economy’s head above water. The ultra-low interest rates mean investors are getting paid very little to own bonds, which pushes some into stocks, boosting their prices.

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