The Oklahoman

S&P 500 closes at another record high Friday

- By Stan Choe and Alex Veiga

NEW YORK—The S&P 500 ticked higher to close at another all-time high Friday, powered by strength for technology stocks and a couple reports on the U.S. economy that were better than expected.

The benchmark index rose 11.65 points, or 0.3%, to 3,397.16, even though the majority of stocks in the index weakened. It followed up on losses across Europe after more discouragi­ng reports there indicated a slowdown in its economies.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average climbed 190.60, or 0.7%, to 27,930.33, and the Nasdaq composite added 46.85, or 0.4%, to 11,311.80.

The S&P 500 surpassed its prior closing high of 3,389.78, which was set on Tuesday after the index erased the last of its historic losses from the coronaviru­s pandemic. Despite its record-setting week, the market's momentum has slowed recently after roaring back from its nearly 34% plunge from late February into March.

The S&P 500 rose 0.7% for the week. It was the seventh gain for the index in the last eight weeks, but the last two have been the most modest during that stretch.

Investors are still waiting for more clarity on several fronts, which could drive the next big move up or down.

The economy has shown s ome s i g ns of s t a l l i ng recently, with Friday's reports from Europe the l a t e s t r e minder t hat a steady rise in coronaviru­s cases may be underminin­g growth. They follow a U.S. report from Thursday that showed that the number of workers applying for unemployme­nt benefits picked up last week.

But the picture remains mixed. A separate report from IHS Markit on Friday said preliminar­y data sugges t s output f r om t he U.S. private sector is at an 18-month high. Sales of previously occupied homes were also stronger in July than economists expected, as activity exploded in every region of the country.

Those reports helped the U.S. stock market recover from declines earlier in the morning.

“The housing market i s strong,” said Quincy

K r o s b y , c h i e f ma r k e t strategist at Prudential Financial. “This week has been about housing. Each one of these reports has been strong.”

Stocks of homebuilde­rs climbed following the data, including a 3.2% rise for D.R. Horton. But it was additional gains for tech stocks that did the most work in the S&P 500's rally.

Most st ocks on Wall Street fell, and the smaller companies in the Russell 2000 small-cap index lost 11.83, or 0.8%, to 1,552.48. Even within the S&P 500 index of big companies, 56% of stocks were lower, with energy producers and financial stocks dropping. But a 1.2% rise for tech stocks in the S&P 500 helped offset that.

T e c h h a s r e ma i n e d r e m a r k a b l y r e s i l i e n t through the pandemic and continued to churn out big profits as work-from-home and other tech-friendly trends accelerate. Apple, which this week became the first U.S. company to have a market value of more than $2 trillion, rose 5.2%.

Big tech stocks, which generally have strong balance sheets and deliver strong growth, will likely continue to be attractive to investors as long as there are questions about economic growth, said Krosby.

“One of the most important factors in this market and for the broadening of the market in order to include those names that have not participat­ed is: You want to see the unemployme­nt landscape heal, and you want to see those i n i t i a l u n e mpl o y ment claims come down,” she said. “That's a major focus for analysts because we're a consumer-led economy. People need jobs in order to consume.”

Deere was another big winner after it reported profit for the latest quarter that was double what Wall Street expected. Its shares rose 4.4%.

The Federal Reserve is continuing to prop up markets and the economy by keeping interest rates at nearly zero and buying reams of bonds. But stimulus from Congress has lapsed, and Democrats and Republican­s on Capitol Hill continue to haggle.

Investors say the economy and markets need another round of big support from Congress.

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