Los Angeles Times

Stocks climb on bumpy day, halting 4-day slide

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Stocks climbed on Thursday after a seesaw day on Wall Street to break out of their longest losing streak since December.

The Standard & Poor’s 500 rose 0.5% for its first gain in five days. The Dow Jones industrial average gained 108 points, or 0.3%, while the Nasdaq composite added 0.7%.

Tech stocks helped lead the way after Nvidia reported better results for the latest quarter than expected.

Its shares jumped 14% after it also gave a forecast for upcoming revenue that topped some analysts’ expectatio­ns. It cited recovering strength in video gaming and demand for artificial intelligen­ce products.

It’s a turnaround for tech and high-growth stocks, which have struggled recently because of worries about rising interest rates. They’re seen as some of the most vulnerable as the Federal Reserve jacks rates higher in hopes of stamping out inflation.

High rates hurt prices for investment­s, particular­ly those seen as the riskiest, most expensive or whose big growth is furthest out in the future. They also raise the risk of a recession because they slow the economy.

After leaping in January, stocks broadly have slammed into a wall this month on worries that inflation isn’t cooling as quickly or as smoothly as hoped. A lengthenin­g list of reports have shown the economy is in stronger shape than expected.

While that’s raised hopes about avoiding a recession in the near term, it’s also forced Wall Street to raise its forecasts for how high the Fed will take interest rates and then how long it will keep them there.

The latest economic data released on Thursday also suggested an economy with enough strength to encourage the Fed to to press on with its “higher for longer” campaign on rates. The fear is that a strong economy could feed into upward pressure on inflation.

Fewer workers applied for unemployme­nt benefits last week than expected, another indication that the job market remains resilient despite the fastest increase in rates in decades.

A separate report said the U.S. economy’s growth was probably a touch weaker in the last three months of 2022 than earlier estimated. But it still grew at a 2.7% annual rate.

Sam Stovall, chief investment strategist at CFRA Research, said stronger economic data going back to the jobs report at the start of the month pushed him to add one more rate hike to his forecast before the Fed takes a pause.

He also pushed out how long he thinks it may take the S&P 500 to get to his target level of 4,575. Instead of thinking it could happen by the end of this year, he thinks it could be 12 months from now.

“The bond market has been pretty pessimisti­c right from the start, assuming that inflation would be higher for longer, that we do have the likelihood of a recession,” Stovall said.

“Our belief is that it probably won’t be a repeat of the Great Recession. In terms of timing, it could actually be fairly similar to the recession of 2001. It could end up being fairly short and happens 14 months after the start of the bear market” for stocks, he added.

Wall Street’s heightened expectatio­ns for the Fed have been most evident in the bond market, where Treasury yields have shot higher this month. They eased a bit on Thursday, taking some pressure off stocks.

The yield on the 10-year Treasury, which helps set rates for mortgages and other important loans, dipped to 3.88% from 3.93% late Wednesday.

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