Finance

Dow rises 100 points, Nasdaq hits record as investors await Biden stimulus package unveiling

U.S. stocks rose on Thursday as traders weighed a potential big economic stimulus package and more good vaccine news versus pressure from weak economic data and political turmoil.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 118 points, led by Boeing and Intel, while the S&P 500 rose 0.3%. The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite climbed 0.7%, hitting an all-time high.

President-elect Joe Biden is expected on Thursday evening to unveil a stimulus plan that will include a boost to the recent $600 direct payments, an extension of increased unemployment insurance and support for state and local governments. The stimulus could be as big as $2 trillion, CNN reported.

“Stocks are extending their gains thanks to ongoing stability in the ‘three pillars’ (stimulus, vaccines, and earnings),” wrote Adam Crisafulli of Vital Knowledge in a note. “The $2T number is about inline w/expectations and investors need to watch yields very closely…All the Trump impeachment noise is largely irrelevant to markets.”

Trial data published on Wednesday showed that Johnson & Johnson’s one-dose coronavirus vaccine is safe and generates a promising immune response.

CNBC’s Jim Cramer said the stock market hasn’t priced in the rosy scenario where the vaccines bring the pandemic under control sometime this year.

“The market has not priced it in, not at all,” Cramer said Thursday on CNBC’s “Squawk on the Street.” “I think there will be animal spirits of people override even what we’ve seen in the stock market.”

However, investors also digested worse-than-expected jobless claims data. First-time claims for unemployment insurance jumped to 965,000 last week, higher than an estimate of 800,000 new claims, according to economists surveyed by Dow Jones.

The market held up in the previous session even as as House members voted to impeach President Donald Trump for a second time — making him the first U.S. president ever to be impeached twice — as a bipartisan majority charged him with inciting a riot in the U.S. Capitol last week.

Wednesday’s slight gains for the S&P 500 and Nasdaq came after Intel rallied nearly 7% to lead tech stocks higher. They also followed U.S. interest rates easing from their highest levels since March 2020.

The benchmark 10-year note yield traded at 1.10% on Thursday a day after hitting a high of 1.18%. That decline in rates came as Federal Reserve officials noted that monetary policy will remain easy for the foreseeable future.

Rates have been rising this year amid the prospects of increased U.S. fiscal stimulus after the Democrats secured majorities in both the House and Senate. Inflation expectations have also been picking up recently.

“We think inflation in the U.S. will be higher than most expect over the next couple of years,” wrote Adam Hoyes, assistant economist at Capital Economics. “At the same time, we think that investors are overestimating how quickly the Fed will allow monetary conditions to tighten. The Fed’s new flexible average inflation targeting framework suggests that it will allow inflation to rise above 2% for a period over the coming years.”

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