San Francisco Chronicle

Tech stocks’ strong gains push markets up

- By Stan Choe and Alex Veiga Stan Choe and Alex Veiga are Associated Press writers.

Stocks marched higher again on Monday, as Wall Street extended its gains from last week’s rally, the market’s best in three months.

The S& P 500 rose 1.6%, following up on strengthen­ing in stock markets around the world. Big Tech stocks, including Apple and Microsoft, powered much of the gains. Their businesses have proved to be practicall­y impervious to the pandemic, unlike companies that would benefit from a strengthen­ing economy.

The market’s latest upward push came as Wall Street appeared to largely shrug off the latest signs that Democrats and Republican­s are no closer to reaching a deal on more aid for the economy, which remains hobbled by the pandemic. Over the weekend, Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi criticized the latest offer from the Trump administra­tion on a stimulus package as “one step forward, two steps back,” while the president’s fellow Republican­s called it too expensive.

Investors may be betting that Congress will deliver a more generous aid bill after the election, should Democrats regain the majority in Congress, as some polls suggest.

“The market is expressing some comfort with Democrats taking the White House and the Senate, if it means that there will be more stimulus,” said Willie Delwiche, investment strategist at Baird. “But the reality is it’s several months away before anything could get passed. It does raise a question in my mind whether or not some of this is too much, too soon in terms of the market anticipati­ng stimulus at this point.”

The S& P 500 rose 57.09 points to 3,534.22. The benchmark index is on a fourday winning streak and is now within 1.4% of its alltime high set Sept. 2. The Dow Jones industrial average climbed 250.62 points, or 0.9%, to 28,837.52. The Nasdaq composite, which is heavily weighted with technology stocks, gained 296.32 points, or 2.6%, to 11,876.26.

Apple climbed 6.4% and alone accounted for a quarter of the S& P 500’ s rise. The iPhone maker also was the index’s biggest gainer. Amazon rose 4.8%. Both companies have events coming up this week, with Apple expected to unveil its latest batch of iPhones on Tuesday and Amazon holding its Prime Day on Tuesday and Wednesday.

Microsoft also closed higher, rising 2.6%, Facebook added 4.3% and Google’s parent company gained 3.6%.

The Russell 2000 index of smallcap stocks, which tends to move more with expectatio­ns for the economy’s strength than Big Tech companies, notched more modest gains than the rest of the market.

The index picked up 11.51 points, or 0.7%, to 1,649.05.

Mondays gains add to last week’s 3.8% rally for the S& P 500, which came amid a dizzying 360degree spin on expectatio­ns for Congress and the White House to be able to deliver more aid for the economy.

President Trump said early in the week he’d put a halt to negotiatio­ns on stimulus, even though economists and the chair of the Federal Reserve say the economic recovery likely needs it. He then backed a set of more limited programs before admonishin­g negotiator­s at the end of the week to “Go Big!” His administra­tion unveiled its latest, increased proposal to House Democrats, valued at about $ 1.8 trillion, but it was rejected by Democrats over the weekend.

Investors have been agitating for more stimulus since the expiration of extra unemployme­nt benefits for laidoff workers and other support for the economy approved by Congress earlier this year. Even if Washington can’t deliver the aid soon, some investors have been building up their expectatio­ns that it may arrive in 2021.

Rising poll numbers for Democrats are raising the odds for a sweep of the White House, Senate and House of Representa­tives. If that were to happen, investors say it would also increase the likelihood for a big stimulus package after the election. That could offset the drag on corporate profits that investors expect a Democratic­controlled Washington would create through higher taxes and tighter regulation­s.

This week also marks the start of earnings reporting season for big U. S. companies, where CEOs will tell investors how they fared from July through September. Analysts are forecastin­g another quarter of weaker profits, with S& P 500 earnings expected to be down 20.5% from a year earlier, according to FactSet.

But that’s not as bad as analysts were forecastin­g a few months ago, and it’s not as bad as the 31.6% drop that S& P 500 companies reported for the spring quarter. As widespread lockdowns eased across the country, companies have been able to feel a bit of increasing momentum.

This week will feature earnings reports from many of the nation’s biggest banks, and how they fare “could give a clearer picture into just how far we’ve come in terms of economic recovery,” said Chris Larkin, managing director at ETrade Financial.

In European markets, indexes rose in France and Germany but slipped in Britain. Asian markets closed broadly higher, except in Japan, where they fell slightly.

U. S. bond trading was closed for a holiday.

 ?? Victor Llorente / New York Times ?? A worker cleans at the New York Stock Exchange in March. Big Tech stocks have proved impervious to the coronaviru­s pandemic since then. The markets continue to rally despite the lack of a second stimulus deal.
Victor Llorente / New York Times A worker cleans at the New York Stock Exchange in March. Big Tech stocks have proved impervious to the coronaviru­s pandemic since then. The markets continue to rally despite the lack of a second stimulus deal.

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