Los Angeles Times

Tech leads Wall Street rally

- Associated press

Wall Street’s rally got back on track Wednesday after more gains for big technology stocks helped pull the Standard & Poor’s 500 index to its sixth gain in seven days.

The S&P 500 drifted up and down for most of the day before a last-hour lift sent it to a gain of 0.8%. Treasury yields and oil prices also ticked higher, but caution continued to hang over markets as gold touched its highest price since 2011.

The Dow Jones industrial average rose 177.10 points, or 0.7%, to 26,067.28, and the Nasdaq composite gained 148.61, or 1.4%, to 10,492.50 to set another record. The S&P 500, which more index funds benchmark themselves against, rose 24.62 to 3,169.94 and is back within 6.4% of its record.

Wednesday’s up-anddown trading was reminiscen­t of the market’s moves over the last month, when Wall Street has largely churned in place. Optimism is rising about a reopening economy, but worsening coronaviru­s infection levels across much of the U.S. South and West threaten to derail the budding economic improvemen­ts.

Several very early indicators on the economy may also be flashing yellow, such as dine-in reservatio­ns at restaurant­s and airport traffic, as some states roll back their reopenings, said Katie Nixon, chief investment officer at Northern Trust Wealth Management.

That could be driving investors back into the comfort of the stocks that have served them so well for years: big tech-oriented stocks. Such stocks have continued to climb as investors bet they’ll be able to grow almost regardless of what the economy is doing.

Amazon added 2.7%, Apple rose 2.3% and Microsoft gained 2.2%. Because of their immense size, those three stocks were responsibl­e for more than half the S&P 500’s gain for the day.

Roughly 2 in 5 stocks in the S&P 500 fell Wednesday, with several chemical and constructi­on-related companies taking the hardest hits.

The mixed trading followed Tuesday’s snapback, when the S&P 500 fell 1.1% to break a five-day winning streak. The selling accelerate­d late in the day, and analysts said investors were probably cashing in on recent gains given the uncertaint­y that lies ahead for markets.

Few headline economic reports are left on the schedule for this week other than Thursday’s update on weekly jobless claims. Next week may have more action, when a couple of dozen companies in the S&P 500 are scheduled to report their earnings results for the second quarter.

Expectatio­ns for the upcoming earnings season are dismal. More important for investors, analysts say, may be what companies say about how they plan to navigate the rest of the year and even 2021, when profits are expected to grow again.

Gold for delivery in July rose $11.30 to $1,815.50 an ounce.

The yield on the 10-year Treasury rose to 0.65% from 0.64%.

Benchmark U.S. crude rose 28 cents to $40.90 a barrel. Brent crude, the internatio­nal standard, added 21 cents to $43.29 a barrel.

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