Stock market today: S&P 500 rallies to its first gain since Christmas
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[January 04, 2025] By
STAN CHOE
NEW YORK (AP) — Wall Street snapped out of its holiday-season funk on
Friday.
The S&P 500 rallied 1.3% for its first gain since Christmas and its best
day in nearly two months. Strength for Big Tech stocks helped it break a
five-day losing streak, its longest since April, and trim its loss for
the week to 0.5%.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 339 points, or 0.8%, and the
Nasdaq composite leaped 1.8%.
Nvidia was the strongest force lifting the market after dashing 4.5%
higher. Other companies caught up in the craze around
artificial-intelligence technology also rose, despite criticism that
their stock prices have already vaulted too high. Super Micro Computer,
which sells servers for AI and other uses, jumped 10.9%, and Palantir
Technologies climbed 6.3%.
“While the easy gains in AI may be behind us, we think this rally looks
far from over,” according to Solita Marcelli, chief investment officer,
Americas, at UBS Global Wealth Management.
Another influential Big Tech stock, Tesla, jumped 8.2% to bounce back
from its 6.1% tumble the day before, when it disclosed it delivered
fewer electric vehicles in the last three months of 2024 than analysts
expected.
Rival Rivian soared 24.5% after saying it delivered more than 14,000
vehicles during the latest quarter. That was more than analysts
expected.
On the losing end of Wall Street was U.S. Steel, which fell 6.5% after
President Joe Biden blocked a nearly $15 billion deal proposed by
Japan’s Nippon Steel to buy its Pittsburgh-based rival.
Beer, wine and liquor companies sank after U.S. Surgeon General Vivek
Murthy warned about the direct link between alcohol consumption and
increased cancer risk. He called for an update on the health warning
label on alcoholic drinks, as well as for a reassessment of guidelines
for alcohol consumption to account for cancer risk.
Molson Coors Beverage fell 3.4%. Brown-Forman, the distillery behind
Jack Daniel’s, lost 2.5%.
All told, the S&P 500 rose 73.92 points to 5,942.47. The Dow Jones
Industrial Average gained 339.86 to 42,732.13, and the Nasdaq composite
jumped 340.88 to 19,621.68.
Wall Street’s post-Christmas pullback dimmed its shine by only a bit
following two stellar years for U.S. stock indexes. They’ve vaulted to
records after the U.S. economy managed to keep growing despite high
interest rates that have helped push inflation nearly all the way down
to the Federal Reserve’s 2% target.
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Traders work on the floor at the New York Stock Exchange in New
York's Financial District Thursday, Jan. 2, 2025. (AP Photo/Seth
Wenig)
But even though the economy and job
market still look solid at the moment, the path ahead is not
assured. Part of the reason the S&P 500 set more than 50 all-time
highs last year was because of the expectation that the Fed would
keep cutting interest rates through 2025, after it began easing them
in September.
Traders are now ratcheting back their expectations for coming cuts
to rates. Inflation is proving to be stubborn as the Fed tries to
wring out the last percentage point of improvement to get inflation
down to 2%. Worries are also rising that tariffs and other policies
coming from President-elect Donald Trump could put upward pressure
on inflation. All the while, critics say U.S. stock prices simply
look too expensive after rising so much faster than corporate
profits.
The threat of Trump’s tariffs has also hurt stock markets overseas.
For China, it’s compounded worries about the world’s second-largest
economy, which is already contending with a struggling property
market and other challenges.
Stocks dropped 1.6% in Shanghai to bring their loss for the week to
5.6%, though they climbed 0.7% in Hong Kong to trim their weekly
loss to 1.6%. European stock indexes also fell.
South Korea’s Kospi index jumped 1.8% after the acting president and
finance minister, Choi Sang-mok, promised to do more to stabilize
the economy. The country is in the midst of a political crisis that
has seen two heads of state impeached in under a month.
In the bond market, Treasury yields climbed after a report on U.S.
manufacturing came in better than feared.
The report from the Institute for Supply Management showed another
month of contraction for manufacturers, the 25th in the last 26. But
it wasn’t as severe as economists expected. Manufacturing has been
one of the areas of the economy hit hardest by the high interest
rates of recent years.
The 10-year Treasury yield rose to 4.59% from 4.56% late Thursday.
The two-year Treasury yield, which more closely tracks expectations
for Fed action, also rose, up to 4.28% from 4.25% late Thursday.
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