Las Vegas Review-Journal

Tech stocks spur Wall Street rebound

Report on wholesale inflation helps ease nerves of investors

- By Stan Choe

NEW YORK — Jumps for Big Tech on Thursday helped U.S. stock indexes claw back much of their slide from the day before.

The S&P 500 rose 38.42 points, or 0.7 percent, to 5,199.06 and recovered most of its prior loss, caused by worries that interest rates might stay high for a while. The Nasdaq composite charged up by 271.84, or 1.7 percent, to a record 16,442.20. The Dow Jones Industrial Average, which has less of an emphasis on tech, was the laggard. It slipped by 2.43 points, or less than 0.1 percent, to 38,459.08.

Apple was the strongest force pushing the market upward, and it climbed 4.3 percent to trim its loss for the year. Nvidia was close behind, as it keeps riding a frenzy around artificial-intelligen­ce technology. The chip company rose 4.1 percent to take its gain for the year to 83 percent. Amazon added 1.7 percent and set a record after topping its prior high set in 2021.

It’s a return to last year’s form, when a handful of Big Tech stocks was responsibl­e for the majority of the market’s gains. This year, the gains had been spreading out. That is, until worries about high inflation sent a chill through financial markets.

In the bond market, which has been driving much of Wall Street’s action, Treasury yields held relatively steady after a mixed batch of data on inflation and the U.S. economy.

When or whether the Federal Reserve will deliver the cuts to interest rates that traders are craving has been one of the questions dominating Wall Street.

After coming into the year forecastin­g at least six cuts to rates, traders have scaled back their expectatio­ns. A string of hotter-than-expected reports on inflation and the economy has raised fears that last year’s progress on inflation has stalled.

A report on Thursday morning showed inflation at the wholesale level was a touch lower last month than economists expected. That’s encouragin­g, but the data also showed underlying trends for inflation were closer to forecasts or just above. Those numbers strip out the effects of fuel and some other prices that are notoriousl­y jumpy.

The update doesn’t offset Wednesday’s disappoint­ingly high report on inflation at the U.S. consumer level, “but it may ease investor nerves, at least in the short term,” said Chris Larkin, managing director, trading and investing, at E-trade from Morgan Stanley.

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