By
Olumide AdesinaU.S. stocks rallied to record highs at the last trading session. Such
impressive gains were triggered by significant buying pressure seen in
the Oil & Gas, Telecoms, and Healthcare sectors.
What you must know
At the close of the New York Stock Exchange, the S&P 500 index climbed 0.29%, Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 0.37%, and the NASDAQ Composite index surged by 0.47%.
- The best performers among the biggest listed U.S companies were the
Dow Inc which gained 2.39%, trading at 54.48 at the close. Also, Johnson
& Johnson ticked up by 1.66% to end at 151.44 and The Travelers
Companies was up 1.20% to 135.51 in late trade.
- The top gainers at the S&P 500 included Equifax Inc which ticked
up by 8.17% to 184.79, and Arconic Corp which rose by 5.69% to settle
at 30.45.
- Not forgetting the top gainers at the NASDAQ Composite including
Curis Inc, which surged by 347.22% to 6.440 and Lexicon Pharmaceuticals
Inc, which ticked up by 71.10% to settle at 2.96.
- Outperforming stocks outnumbered underperforming stocks on the New
York Stock Exchange by 1868 to 1216. 85 remained unchanged on the Nasdaq
Stock Exchange, 1757 rallied higher and 1220 dropped, while 83 ended
unchanged.
What they are saying
Stephen Innes, Chief Global Market Strategist at
Axi, in a note to Nairametrics, spoke on the prevailing market macros
triggering U.S stocks to record high:
“US equities nudged higher Tuesday as tech stocks led the gains, recovering from losses early in the session.
“The sentiment was helped by reports suggesting US Republican
Senate leader, McConnell, had offered the Democrats a compromise. Also
supportive of Main Street concerns, White House officials asked Senate
Republicans to include a $600-holiday stocking check for households as
part of any stimulus package.
“With the markets starting to exhibit some year-end fatigue, any
stimulus holiday stocking will come at a most welcome time and ensure
that well-subscribed equity markets will cross the year-end finishing
line on a positive note.”
Bottom line
It seems investors are overlooking the negative reports coming from
COVID-19 onslaughts amid global investors sentiment and momentum
remaining stronger as regards to investing in U.S stocks, on the bias
that stock bulls remain very much in the driving seat.
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