The Oklahoman

Stocks rally the most since March as momentum rises

Surge powered by tech; financial and health care also perform well

- Damian J. Troise and Alex Veiga

Technology companies powered a broad rally for stocks on Wall Street on Thursday, lifting the S&P 500 to its biggest gain since March.

The benchmark index rose 1.7% a day after breaking a three-day losing streak. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 1.6% and the tech-heavy Nasdaq climbed 1.7%.

More than 90% of stocks within the S&P 500 gained ground. Apple and Microsoft were among the big gainers in the technology sector, each rising more than 2%.

Financial and health care stocks also did well. JPMorgan Chase rose 1.5%. UnitedHeal­th Group rose 4.2% after the health insurer raised its profit forecast for the year following a strong third quarter.

The gains came as investors welcomed encouragin­g quarterly report cards from several companies. This is the first big week for companies reporting their most recent quarterly financial results. Every S&P 500 company that reported earnings so far this week has exceeded Wall Street’s forecasts.

“It’s not surprising that the market has reacted pretty well to that,” said Randy Frederick, vice president of trading & derivative­s at Charles Schwab.

The S&P 500 rose 74.46 points to 4,438.26. It’s now on pace for a weekly gain. The Dow climbed 534.75 points to 34,912.56. The Nasdaq added 251.79 points to 14,823.43.

Small company stocks also notched gains. The Russell 2000 index rose 32.21 points, or 1.4%, to 2,274.18.

Investors were also reviewing the latest data on jobs and inflation as they try to gauge the economy’s health and path forward.

The Labor Department said the number of Americans applying for unemployme­nt benefits last week fell to its lowest level since the pandemic began. It’s a positive sign for a job market that is still trying to recover from the initial hit from the pandemic 18 months ago. A surge of cases over the summer stunted the recovery.

The latest report on inflation showed that businesses continue to face pressure from rising costs. The Labor Department said inflation at the wholesale level rose 8.6% in September compared to a year ago, the largest advance since the 12-month change was first calculated in 2010.

The report came a day after the government said inflation at the consumer level rose 5.4% in September from a year ago, matching the highest rate since 2008.

The market largely took the inflation reports in stride, which suggests investors may be feeling more at ease since the Federal Reserve has signaled it may begin to taper the unpreceden­ted financial support it has been giving the economy since the early days of the pandemic and eventually begin raising its benchmark interest rate in order to combat rising inflation. Bond yields edged lower.

The yield on the 10-year Treasury fell to 1.52% from 1.55% late Wednesday.

Gold for December delivery rose $3.20 to $1,797.90 an ounce. Silver for December delivery rose 31 cents to $23.48 an ounce, and December copper rose 11 cents to $4.63 a pound.

The dollar rose to 113.66 Japanese yen from 113.35 yen. The euro rose to $1.1598 from $1.1589.

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