Stamford Advocate

Stocks recoup some losses

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Stocks closed broadly higher on Wall Street Tuesday, regaining their footing a day after suffering their worst loss in months amid the worsening pandemic and potentiall­y market-moving Senate elections.

The S&P 500 rose 0.7 percent, recovering about half of the index’s losses from a day earlier. The majority of big stocks in the S&P 500 notched gains, with oil producers leading the way as crude prices strengthen­ed. Stocks of smaller companies did even better than the broader market, driving the

Russell 2000 index of smallcaps to a market-leading 1.7 percent gain. Treasury yields rose.

The market’s moves were tenuous early on, though. At one point, the S&P 500 gave up all of an early-morning rise and was down 0.2 percent even after a report showed U.S. manufactur­ing grew last month at its strongest rate since 2018.

“While we probably will end up having a pullback sometime in the near future, the bull is not ready to wind down just yet,” said Sam Stovall, chief investment strategist at CFRA.

The S&P 500 rose 26.21 points to 3,726.86. The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 167.71 points, or 0.6 percent, to 30,391.60. The Nasdaq composite picked up 120.51 points, or 1 percent, to 12,818.96. The Russell 2000 climbed 33.19 points to 1,979.11.

Wall Street’s uneven start to the year comes as investors remain optimistic that the economy will recover this year as more Americans receive coronaviru­s vaccinatio­ns. Optimism is being kept in check as new infections climb at frightenin­g rates around the world, threatenin­g to bring more lockdown orders that would punish the economy.

Traders have also focused on the outcome of the runoff elections in Georgia Tuesday, which will determine which party controls the Senate. Some analysts say the results could mark clear winners and losers in the stock market.

The general thinking is that a Democratic sweep would open the door to higher tax rates, tougher regulation on businesses and other potentiall­y profit-crimping changes from Washington. That would put broad pressure on the stock market, with Big Tech stocks in particular perhaps attracting more regulatory scrutiny.

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