The Oklahoman

Stocks rise as traders eye major corporate earnings

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NEW YORK – Wall Street stocks ended higher on Monday following a market sell-off in previous sessions as investors eyed a busy week for quarterly results from key companies that would provide a glimpse of the U.S. economy’s health.

The benchmark S&P 500 and the Nasdaq rebounded from a decline over the past six sessions which had been caused by investors re-evaluating their expectatio­ns on interest rate cuts in the wake of strong economic data, geopolitic­al tensions, persistent inflation and commentary from Federal Reserve officials.

All 11 S&P 500 sectors closed higher, with technology and financial stocks leading gains.

Markets were gearing up for quarterly results from megacap companies this week, including some of the so-called Magnificent Seven stocks such as Tesla, Meta Platforms, Alphabet and Microsoft.

“I think it’s just standard buy-onthe-dip after a 5% pullback that kind of wakes people up to put money to work,” said Lamar Villere, portfolio manager at Villere & Co in New Orleans.

“Investors are looking ahead to this week with hugely significant earnings coming out and with concerns about what the Fed is doing with pushing back any rate cuts,” Villere added.

Money markets are pricing in only about 41 basis points of rate cuts this year, down from about 150 seen at the beginning of the year, according to LSEG data.

In addition to top corporate earnings, markets are also awaiting the release this week of the March personal consumptio­n expenditur­e data – the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge – to further ascertain the monetary policy trajectory.

Fed policymake­rs are in a media blackout period ahead of their policy meeting on May 1.

The S&P 500 gained 43.37 points, or 0.87%, to 5,010.60 and the Nasdaq Composite gained 169.30 points, or 1.11%, to 15,451.31. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 253.58 points, or 0.67%, to 38,239.98.

Megacap growth stocks ended higher, with gains in Alphabet, Amazon.com and Apple. Nvidia rebounded from a 10% drop in the previous session.

“This is predicated on positive technical expectatio­ns on tech earnings and traders not wanting to be short in front of it, and the PCE numbers later this week that people are somewhat sanguine about as well,” said Thomas Hayes, chairman of hedge fund Great Hill Capital in New York.

Tesla shares dropped as the electric vehicle maker cut prices in a number of its major markets, including China and Germany, following price reductions in the United States.

The U.S. dollar climbed to a fresh 34year peak against the yen in quiet trading. The dollar rose to 154.85 yen versus the Japanese currency, its highest since mid-1990. It was last up 0.1% at 154.82 yen, a whisker away from the 155-level that is next on traders’ radars for possible interventi­on.

Gold prices dropped more than 2% to a one-week low on Monday as worries over a wider Middle East conflict subsided.

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