Los Angeles Times

Stocks start shakily but close higher

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U. S. stocks shook off an early slide and closed broadly higher Thursday as the market steadied after its worst drop in more than four months.

The Standard & Poor’s 500 index rose 1.2%, bouncing back from a drop of 0.3% in the early going. Traders welcomed encouragin­g data on the pace of layoffs and how powerfully the economy rebounded during the summer from its coronaviru­s- induced coma.

Economists warn that big challenges still lie ahead, though. The S& P 500 was coming off a 3.5% tumble Wednesday on worries the worsening pandemic will drag down the economy and corporate profits again.

A strong rebound in technology sector stocks helped power the rally ahead of widely anticipate­d quarterly report cards from Facebook, Amazon and Google’s parent company. The three Big Tech companies each reported results after the close of regular trading that topped Wall Street’s expectatio­ns.

The S& P 500 rose 39.08 points to 3,310.11. The gain was less than half of what the benchmark index lost a day earlier. The Dow Jones industrial average gained 139.16 points, or 0.5%, to 26,659.11. The index had been down 229 points and as high as 371 points.

The tech- heavy Nasdaq composite fared better than the rest of the market. It climbed 180.72 points, or 1.6%, to 11,185.59.

The major stock indexes are still on track to post weekly losses, including the second straight weekly decline for the S& P 500.

Despite the relatively calm moves, caution continues to hang over the market. A measure of investors’ fear in the U. S. stock market touched its highest level since June before receding Thursday, and oil prices continued their sharp descent on worries about demand from a virus- weakened economy.

Coronaviru­s cases are also on the rise in the United States, raising worries about restrictio­ns on businesses returning. Even if the sweeping lockdowns that suffocated the economy earlier this year don’t come back, the fear is that the worsening pandemic could neverthele­ss keep customers away from businesses and undercut their profits.

The economy had been making strides in the summer, and it grew at a record annual rate of 33.1% from July through September, according to a government estimate released Thursday. That followed up on its crash from April through June, when it shrank at an annualized rate of 31.4%.

More recently, the number of U. S. workers applying for unemployme­nt benefits eased last week to 751,000. Although that’s still incredibly high compared with before COVID- 19, it’s not as bad as the 791,000 from the previous week. It was also better than economists had forecast.

But the budding recovery is under threat now with coronaviru­s cases surging and with Congress and the White House unable to deliver additional support for the economy. Economists and investors have been asking for such assistance since the summer, when the last round of supplement­al benefits for laid- off workers and other stimulus approved by Congress earlier this year expired.

Hopes are fading that Washington can get anything done soon, and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi ( DSan Francisco) sent a letter to Treasury Secretary Steven T. Mnuchin on Thursday listing all the topics she’s waiting to hear back on in their negotiatio­ns. They include benefits for laid- off workers and measures on coronaviru­s testing.

Investors had their eye on another batch of corporate earnings reports Thursday. Heading into the earnings season, expectatio­ns have been high for Facebook, Amazon and other Big Tech companies, which have been largely cruising through the pandemic. Investors have bid up their stock prices on the belief that their profits will continue to soar during the pandemic.

Earnings per share for S& P 500 companies are on track to be down about 13% from a year earlier. That’s a much milder drop than the nearly 21% decline that Wall Street was forecastin­g at the start of October, according to FactSet.

The yield on the 10- year Treasury rose to 0.83% from 0.79% late Wednesday.

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