Los Angeles Times

Stocks climb further, fueled by optimism

S&P 500 is back above where it was on Feb. 26, one week after its record high.

- Associated press

Stocks bubbled even higher Wednesday, vaulting Wall Street back to where it was just one week after it set its all-time high earlier this year, as optimism builds that the economy can climb out of its hole relatively quickly.

The Standard & Poor’s 500 rose 1.4% for its fourth straight gain as lockdowns loosen around the world and raise hopes for an economic recovery. Treasury yields also strengthen­ed in a sign of improved confidence after reports suggested that although the U.S. economy is still getting pummeled, it may not be as bad as economists had feared.

The S&P 500 rose 42.05 points to 3,122.87, the latest upward move in its nearly 40% surge since late March. The index is back above where it was on Feb. 26, one week after setting its record.

The Dow Jones industrial average gained 527.24 points, or 2%, to 26,269.89, and the Nasdaq composite rose 74.54, or 0.8%, to 9.682.91.

A survey from payroll processor ADP said that private employers cut nearly 2.8 million jobs last month, but that was much milder than the 9.3 million that economists told investors to expect. That raises optimism that Friday’s more comprehens­ive jobs report from the U.S. government may also not be as bad as feared. Economists say it may show a loss of 8 million jobs, which would be a decelerati­on from April’s loss of 20.5 million jobs.

Other reports showed an economy that remains in bad shape, but not quite as terrible as economists had forecast. One report said the nation’s services industries contracted by less than economists expected, and at a more modest rate than in April. Another report said factory orders dropped 13% in April, but not by as much as the 14.8% that economists had forecast.

Companies that would most benefit from a growing economy led the market

Wednesday, continuing a recent trend as hopes rise that the economy and life in general can return closer to normal as business shutdown orders lift.

Financial stocks in the S&P 500 jumped 3.8% for one of the largest gains among the 11 sectors that make up the index. JPMorgan Chase rose 5.4%, and Wells Fargo added 5.2%. They recovered more of the losses sustained this year on worries that the recession would mean waves of loan defaults for them.

Smaller stocks were also among the market’s biggest winners, as they often are when expectatio­ns are rising for the economy’s strength. The Russell 2000 index of small-cap stocks rose 2.4%.

Stocks that had been stalwarts earlier when investors were building portfolios that could win in a stay-at-home economy, meanwhile, were lagging. Netflix fell 1.2%.

In other trading, chicken company Pilgrim’s Pride lost 12.4% after its chief executive was among several industry executives charged with price fixing by a federal grand jury, and movie theater operator AMC Entertainm­ent fell 2.5% after saying it may not survive the coronaviru­s crisis, which has shuttered its theaters.

Widespread protests around the country following the killing of George Floyd haven’t dented the rally, at least so far. One worry is that by bringing so many people together, the protests could also lead to more infections of the coronaviru­s.

Many profession­al investors have been warning that the stock market’s rally may have been too much, too soon. The recovery for the economy is likely to be much slower than the sharp rebound the stock market has just undertaken, which could be setting investors up for disappoint­ment.

Concern is particular­ly high that stock prices have climbed much faster than expectatio­ns for coming corporate profits and other measures of financial health, which is pushing up what Wall Street calls “valuations” for stocks.

The yield on the 10-year Treasury rose to 0.75% from 0.68% late Tuesday. European and Asian stock markets also rose.

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