Finance

Dow rebounds more than 400 points after blue chips suffer worst loss since January

U.S. stocks climbed on Thursday, rebounding from steep losses in the previous session investors picked up shares after the pullback.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 433.79 points to 34,021.45, while the S&P 500 jumped 1.2% to finish the day at 4,112.50. Every sector but energy ended the day in positive territory.

The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite closed up 0.7% at 13,124.99 as investors tried to pick some winners in the beaten-up tech sector. Apple and Microsoft each bounced more than 1.5%.

Elon Musk’s electric car maker Tesla lost 3%. That stock has posted declines in 11 of the last 13 trading sessions and is on track to post its worst week since March 2020 with a week-to-date loss of 14.97%.

“This bull market ultimately has further to run,” said Keith Lerner, chief market strategist at Truist. “Investors who are underweight equities should look to average into the market weakness and become more aggressive.”

Classic reopening trades including airlines jumped after the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said fully vaccinated people no longer need to wear a face mask or stay six feet away from others in most setting. American Airlines, United and Delta each advanced at least 2% each.

The stock market took a big hit on Wednesday, led to the downside by technology shares as key inflation data showed higher-than-expected price pressures.

The Dow tumbled 680 points on Wednesday to notch its single-worst session since January. The S&P 500 lost 2.1%, its biggest one-day drop since February, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite slid 2.6%.

Traders across the board cited a rise in interest rates, triggered by a hotter-than-expected inflation report, for the midweek slump.

The Labor Department reported that the prices American consumers pay for goods and services accelerated at their fastest pace since 2008 last month with the Consumer Price Index spiking 4.2% from a year ago.

“We do not think that yesterday’s inflation print changes the longer-term case for inflation after the reopening trade, and that is what ultimately matters for markets,” AB Bernstein strategist Inigo Fraser-Jenkins said in a note.

Investors largely shook off another hot inflation report on Thursday, with producer prices in April jumping more than 6% from a year ago.

Investors have been quick to dump growth stocks amid creeping inflation concerns since rising prices tend to squeeze margins and erode corporate profits. If price pressures run too hot for a sustained period of time, the Federal Reserve would be forced to taper accommodative monetary policy.

Tech, a top-performing sector in 2020 amid the height of the Covid-19 pandemic, has come under pronounced pressure in recent weeks.

The S&P 500 and the Dow are still down more than 2% each this week. The Nasdaq Composite is the worst performer among the major averages, off by 4.5% this week.

Bitcoin dropped 9% after Elon Musk tweeted that Tesla would halt car purchases using the digital token for environmental concerns, a surprising reversal for the crypto-supporter. Coinbase, which just went public on the promise of crypto-trading becoming mainstream, dropped 2% following Musk’s comments.

—CNBC’s Maggie Fitzgerald and Patti Domm contributed to this report.

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