The Jerusalem Post

Dow chalks up best week in five

Index closes at record high on Trump plans

- • By NOEL RANDEWICH

The Dow Jones industrial average ended at a record closing high on Friday, capping off its best week since 2011 after Donald Trump’s unexpected victory in the US presidenti­al election.

Since his triumph on Tuesday, investors have been betting on Trump’s campaign promises to simplify regulation in the health and financial sectors and boost spending on infrastruc­ture.

“Wall Street is going to be watching a lot of [Trump’s] appointmen­ts and policy announceme­nts to see whether it validates the more optimistic tone we’ve seen in the markets in the past few days,” said Alan Gayle, senior investment strategist and director of asset allocation at RidgeWorth Investment­s in Atlanta, Georgia.

The S&P 500 financial index has gained 8% in the past three sessions and risen to levels not seen since 2008 during the financial crisis. The financial index has still not recovered to levels seen before the crisis.

Industrial­s have surged 5% since the election and healthcare is up 3%.

Tempering sentiment among stock investors, Federal Reserve Vice Chairman Stanley Fischer said on Friday economic growth prospects appear strong enough for a gradual hike in interest rates, but the US central bank is monitoring an increase in longterm government borrowing costs.

The Dow Jones industrial average climbed 0.21% to end the week at 18,847.66 and the Nasdaq Composite added 0.54% to 5,237.11.

The S&P 500 declined 0.14% to 2,164.45, weighed down by weakness in energy stocks.

For the week, the Dow rose 5.4%, its biggest gain since 2011. The S&P 500’s 3.8% gain for the week was its strongest in two years.

The Nasdaq biotechnol­ogy index fell 0.64% on Friday but ended the week up 10%, its best week since 2000.

Nvidia jumped 30%, helping keep the Nasdaq in positive territory after the graphic chip maker reported its biggest quarterly revenue growth in more than six years.

Walt Disney rose 2.86% after its executives promised earnings growth for the next two years. Barclays also upgraded the media company’s stock to “equal weight” from “underweigh­t.”

On Friday, the Bank of Israel set its representa­tive rate for the US dollar at NIS 3.8440, for the British pound at NIS 4.8578, for the Canadian dollar at NIS 2.8497, for the Australian dollar at NIS 2.9177, and for the South African rand at 0.2695. The bank set the representa­tive rate for the euro at NIS 4.1794 and for 100 yen at NIS 3.6098.

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