Los Angeles Times

Stocks inch up amid muted trading

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Stocks eked out modest gains on Wall Street on Thursday, extending the market’s winning streak into a third day and keeping the major indexes on pace to end the week higher.

The Standard & Poor’s 500 index shrugged off a midday slide and rose 0.2%. Banks, energy companies and industrial stocks weighed on the benchmark index, though solid gains by Apple, Microsoft and other big technology stocks helped nudge the index up.

Trading was mostly muted as investors reviewed the latest corporate earnings and a surprise increase in the number of Americans filing for unemployme­nt benefits. Still, the gains preserve stock indexes’ comeback after a steep slide to start the week.

“The market is trying to come to terms with the big sell-off on Monday,” said David Joy, chief market strategist at Ameriprise Financial. “We’ve had a rebound that allowed us to recapture a lot of it yesterday, and today it seems as though the market is searching for the next directiona­l catalyst and hasn’t really found one.”

Joy said the next big market-moving event could come as early as Wednesday, when Federal Reserve policymake­rs hold their next two-day meeting. A key question: Will the central bank provide new hints about when it might begin to unwind some of the support that’s helped keep the economy going during the pandemic now that inflation is on the rise?

The S&P 500 rose 8.79 points to 4,367.48. The Dow Jones industrial average added 25.35 points, or 0.1%, to 34,823.35. The Nasdaq composite gained 52.64 points, or 0.4%, to 14,684.60. All three indexes remain close to the all-time highs they set early last week.

Wall Street’s smallest companies lost ground. The Russell 2000 index fell 34.57 points, or 1.5%, to 2,199.48.

The Labor Department reported that unemployme­nt claims rose last week to 419,000, the most in two months and more than economists were expecting. Economists characteri­zed last week’s increase as most likely a blip caused by some one-time factors and partly a result of the inevitable bumpiness in the week-to-week data.

That said, investors have been nervous about how well the economy is recovering after the pandemic along with lingering concerns that the Delta variant of the coronaviru­s, which is spreading rapidly across the country, may cause businesses and cities to put restrictio­ns into place yet again.

The 10-year Treasury note traded at a yield of 1.26% on Thursday, down from 1.28% the day before. Although the benchmark yield has recovered from its low yields earlier in the week, it continues to trade at relatively low levels given that the economy is in a recovery.

The lower yields weighed on banks, which can charge higher interest on loans when yields rise. JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America each fell 1.3%.

Big technology companies helped counter the dip from banks. Apple rose 1% and Microsoft gained 1.7%.

Home builders mostly fell after the National Assn. of Realtors said sales of previously occupied U.S. homes rose in June after a fourmonth pullback. The June data also showed the median U.S. home price hit a record high last month, reflecting an increase in sales of higher-end homes, while sales of properties less than $150,000 declined.

The sharp rise in home prices, even with mortgage rates near historic lows, has stoked worries that many would-be buyers may be priced out of the market. Home builder Beazer Homes USA fell 2.9% and D.R. Horton slid 2%.

Company earnings reports continue to roll out. Texas Instrument­s fell 5.3% for the biggest drop in the S&P 500 after its results disappoint­ed investors. The chipmaker also gave a weak outlook for the second half.

Union Pacific rose 1.1% after the railroad said its profit jumped 59% from a year earlier, helped by a 22% increase in cargo carried compared with a year earlier. The results also beat analysts’ expectatio­ns. Domino’s Pizza jumped 14.6% for the biggest gain in the S&P 500 after its results also surpassed estimates.

Intel was down 2.6% in after-market trading following the release of its quarterly results. Twitter also reported its results after the market closed and was up 3.7% in extended trading.

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