San Francisco Chronicle

Tech stocks gain, but travel firms fall

- By Stan Choe and Ken Sweet Stan Choe and Ken Sweet are Associated Press writers.

NEW YORK — Stocks closed mostly higher on Wednesday, helped by big technology stocks, but news of tighter restrictio­ns in New York State helped dent an earlier rally.

The S& P 500 closed up 27.13 points, or 0.8%, to 3,572.66. The benchmark index is now just 8 points below the record high it set in September.

The technology­heavy Nasdaq composite rose 232.57 points, or 2%, to 11,786.43.

The Dow Jones industrial average fell 23.29 points, or 0.1%, to 29,397.63. The index was dragged lower in part by American Express and Walt Disney, two stocks that shot up this week after news of a potentiall­y successful vaccine sent travel, entertainm­ent and tourism companies surging. American Express was down more than 4% and Walt Disney fell 3%.

The Dow declined shortly after news was received that New York would put restrictio­ns on bars, restaurant­s and gyms as COVID19 infections rose in the state.

Enthusiasm about the economy’s possible return to normal has vaulted stocks higher this week following encouragin­g, but incomplete data on a potential vaccine for COVID19. That pushed investors to shift dollars out of the old winners of the stayathome, virus-wracked economy and into beatendown stocks that have a brighter future if people feel comfortabl­e again going outside their homes.

Big Tech stocks had borne the brunt of this week’s dramatic reordering, but they clawed back some of those earlier losses. Cupertino’s Apple was up 3%, Netflix of Los Gatos gained more than 2% and Menlo Park’s Facebook rose about 1.5%. Microsoft rose 2.6%, erasing much of its loss for the week. Amazon gained 3.4% to pare its weekly loss.

Elsewhere in the market, some of the massive rotation that swept through early this week also eased off the accelerato­r.

The S& P 500 was nearly evenly split between stocks rising and falling, while energy and bank stocks gave back a bit of their huge gains from Monday and Tuesday.

Tourism and entertainm­ent stocks fell sharply, following the declines by American Express and Walt Disney. Delta Air Lines fell 5.5% and Wynn Resorts dropped 5.1%.

While several significan­t risks remain for Wall Street broadly, the optimistic case that investors are embracing is that one or more coronaviru­s vaccines could help corral the virus by the second half of next year, encouragin­g people to return to life as it was before the pandemic.

All that economic activity would come on top of the tremendous aid that the Federal Reserve and other central banks around the world are pumping into the economy through very low interest rates and massive purchases of bonds. Hope also remains that the U. S. government may eventually deliver some form of support for the economy, though its total size would likely be smaller than if Democrats had swept this month’s elections.

Strategist­s along Wall Street are raising their forecasts for stock prices on expectatio­ns that political control of Washington will remain split between the parties. Republican­s look set to keep the Senate, as long as runoff elections go their way in Georgia in January, while Democrats will hold the House of Representa­tives.

Democrat Joe Biden has clinched enough electoral votes to win the White House, clearing some of the uncertaint­y that weighed on the market through the vicious campaign. Even though President Trump has refused to concede, investors are ignoring his complaints. They’re instead working on the assumption that a split Washington under Biden could keep tax rates low while offering more steady and predictabl­e policies.

Those expected results helped push strategist­s at Goldman Sachs to raise their forecast for the S& P 500 at the end of this year to 3,700 from 3,600. That would imply another 4.4% climb from Tuesday’s closing level. They expect it to rally another 16% through 2021. But the biggest driver for that is the hope for a return to normal life, rather than what happens in Washington.

 ?? Courtney Crow / New York Stock Exchange ?? Specialist Jorge Fernandez works on the New York Stock Exchange trading floor. Investors boosted Silicon Valley companies.
Courtney Crow / New York Stock Exchange Specialist Jorge Fernandez works on the New York Stock Exchange trading floor. Investors boosted Silicon Valley companies.

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