The Oklahoman

Late rally on Wall Street

- By Stan Choe, Damian J. Troise and Alex Veiga The Associated Press

NEW YORK — Optimism returned to Wall Street on Friday, and stocks rallied to cap a shaky week dogged by worries that rising coronaviru­s counts may halt the economy's recent upswing.

The S&P 500 climbed 1%, and the biggest gains came from cruise ship operators, airlines, banks and other companies that most need the economy to continue to reopen and strengthen.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 369.21 points, or 1.4%, to 26,075.30. The Nasdaq composite added 69.69, or 0.7%, to 10,617.44, a new high. The S&P 500 rose 32.99 to 3,185.04.

After starting Friday with modest drops, stocks and Treasury yields erased their declines to drive higher. In a signal of rising expectatio­ns for the economy, the Russell 2000 index of smaller stocks rose more than the rest of the market, up 1.7%.

They're the latest eddies in what was an erratic week for markets. Prices swung, sometimes sharply within a single day, with worries about rising hospitaliz­ations and COVID-19 trends in Florida and other hotpots around the world. The S&P 500 flip-flopped between a gain and loss through each day of the week.

Analysts said an encouragin­g report from Gilead Sciences about its investigat­ion al treatment of C OVID -19, rem de sivir, helped drive Friday's rebound.

“So, for the first time in a lot of days we' re seeing smaller caps outperform,” said Bob Shea, CEO of Tri mTabs Asset Management .“We' re seeing just a kind of meanrevers­ion day, and they're using the Gilead news to do it.”

The week's meandering action was a microcosm of t he up- and- down churn that stocks have been stuck in for a little more than a month.

The market's momentum has stalled since early June, after the S& P 500 roared back to recover most of an earlier 34% plummet. Massive amounts of aid from central banks and government­s around the world ignited the rally.

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