Current:Home > NewsStock market today: Wall Street pulls closer to records after retailers top profit forecasts-LoTradeCoin
Stock market today: Wall Street pulls closer to records after retailers top profit forecasts
View Date:2024-12-24 01:26:52
NEW YORK (AP) — U.S. stocks ticked higher Wednesday after more big companies delivered profit reports that topped analysts’ expectations.
The S&P 500 rose 0.4% a day after breaking an eight-day winning streak, its longest of the year. The index is back to within 0.8% of its all-time high set last month.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average added 55 points, or 0.1%, while the Nasdaq composite gained 0.6%.
Treasury yields eased a bit in the bond market as investors wait for the week’s main event, which will arrive Friday. That’s when Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell will give a speech at an annual economic symposium. The hope is he’ll offer clues about how deeply and quickly the Fed will begin cutting interest rates next month after it jacked them to a two-decade high to beat inflation.
In the meantime, more companies joined a parade to deliver what looks to be the best growth in profit for S&P 500 companies since late 2021.
Target jumped 11.2% after the retailer said an important underlying measure of sales strength for the spring came in at the high end of its expectations, as traffic increased at both its stores and online. Its profit topped analysts’ estimates, and it raised its forecast for the full year.
TJX, the company behind TJ Maxx and Marshalls, rose 6.1% after it likewise reported stronger profit for the latest quarter than expected. The retailer also raised its profit forecast for the full year and said it saw increased customer transactions at all of its divisions.
They helped offset a 12.9% drop for Macy’s. The company reported better profit than analysts expected, but its revenue fell short of forecasts. It also lowered its expected range for sales this year, due in part to “a more discriminating consumer.”
Worries have been growing about whether U.S. shoppers can keep up their spending and keep the slowing economy out of a recession. Inflation is slowing, but prices are nevertheless much higher than before the pandemic, and many U.S. households have burned through the savings they built up during that stay-at-home period.
Concerns have been particularly high for U.S. households at the lower end of the income spectrum. High interest rates instituted by the Federal Reserve have made it more expensive to borrow money, compounding the difficulty.
That’s why the widespread expectation is for the Fed next month to lower its main interest rate for the first time since the COVID crash of 2020. The only question is how much and how quickly it will move.
Most Federal Reserve officials agreed last month that they would likely cut at their next meeting in September, as long as inflation continued to cool, according to minutes of the meeting released Wednesday.
The yield on the 10-year Treasury has been sinking since April on such expectations. It eased a bit further Wednesday, down to 3.79% from 3.81% late Tuesday.
A preliminary revision released by the U.S. government in the morning suggested the economy created 818,000 fewer jobs in the year through March than earlier reported. That’s a big number and adds to evidence showing a cooling job market, though it was smaller than some had feared.
“We have long warned that the jobs numbers were unreliable and subject to dramatic revision,” said Nancy Tengler, chief executive of Laffer Tengler Investments. She suggested focusing on the longer term and said rising U.S. worker productivity is an encouraging signal for the economy.
On Wall Street, coal companies Arch Resources and Consol Energy saw their stocks swing after they said they were combining in an all-stock “merger of equals.” After merging, they plan to go by a new name, Core Natural Resources.
Both their stocks initially jumped following the announcement but regressed as the day progressed. Arch Resources ended the day down 1.9%, while Consol Energy gained 0.9%.
All told, the S&P 500 rose 23.73 points to 5,620.85. The Dow gained 55.52 to 40,890.49, and the Nasdaq composite tacked on 102.05 to 17,918.99.
In stock markets abroad, indexes were mixed. Japan’s Nikkei 225 slipped 0.3%. It was a much more modest move than some of its huge swings in recent weeks, including its worst day since the Black Monday crash of 1987.
___
AP Business Writers Yuri Kageyama, Matt Ott and Alex Veiga contributed.
veryGood! (29667)
Related
- Former NFL coach Jack Del Rio charged with operating vehicle while intoxicated
- Kentucky lawmakers resume debate over reopening road in the heart of the state Capitol complex
- Heavy snow strands scores of vehicles on a main expressway in central Japan
- New Jersey Sheriff Richard Berdnik fatally shoots himself in restaurant after officers charged
- Martha Stewart playfully pushes Drew Barrymore away in touchy interview
- Teenager awaiting trial in 2020 homicide flees outside Philadelphia hospital
- Biden to speak at United Auto Workers conference as he woos blue-collar vote in battleground states
- Pope says Holocaust Remembrance Day reminds world that war can never be justified
- Sean Diddy Combs' Lawyers File New Motion for Bail, Claiming Evidence Depicts a Consensual Relationship
- A fast train and a truck collide in eastern Czech Republic, killing 1 and injuring 19 people
Ranking
- Krispy Kreme is giving free dozens to early customers on World Kindness Day
- Baltimore Ravens' Mike Macdonald, Todd Monken in running to be head coaches on other teams
- Tom Holland Hypes Up Zendaya After Shutting Down Breakup Rumors
- New Jersey Supreme Court rules against Ocean casino in COVID business interruption case
- What that 'Disclaimer' twist says about the misogyny in all of us
- Baby names we could see vanish this year and those blazing ahead in 2024
- Farmers block roads across France to protest low wages and countless regulations
- Massachusetts is planning to shutter MCI-Concord, the state’s oldest prison for men
Recommendation
-
College football Week 12 expert picks for every Top 25 game include SEC showdowns
-
Company seeking to mine near Okefenokee will pay $20,000 to settle environmental violation claims
-
Appeals court declines to reconsider dispute over Trump gag order, teeing up potential Supreme Court fight
-
Russia hits Ukraine's biggest cities with deadly missile attack as Moscow blames U.S. for diplomatic deadlock
-
Man killed by police in Minnesota was being sought in death of his pregnant wife
-
Save Up to 72% Off on Cult-Fave Peter Thomas Roth Essentials That Will Transform Your Skincare Routine
-
Darius Jackson's Brother Denied Restraining Order Against Keke Palmer and Her Mom
-
Tanzania’s main opposition party holds first major protest in several years, after ban was lifted