Business

US stocks gain on better economic data

Equities shrug off early weakness, finishes session solidly higher

Updated 5 years ago · Published on 06 Jan 2021 6:30AM

US stocks gain on better economic data
Investors are still on edge over the United States Georgia vote, but were encouraged by an Institute for Supply Management survey of manufacturers that topped expectations. – Wikipedia pic, January 6, 2021

NEW YORK – Wall Street stocks advanced on Tuesday following better-than-expected United States economic data, as markets monitored Georgia elections that will determine control of the Senate.

Equities shrugged off early weakness and Monday’s decline to finish the session solidly higher after manufacturing data topped estimates and fourth-quarter auto sales also impressed to the upside.

Petroleum-linked equities had a big day after a surprise agreement by oil exporters boosted crude prices.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 0.6% to 30,391.60.

The broad-based S&P 500 climbed 0.7% to 3,726.86, while the tech-rich Nasdaq Composite Index jumped 1.0% to 12,818.96.

The gains came after stocks pulled back on Monday on worries that a Democratic sweep of the two Georgia Senate runoffs would clear the way for tax increases and other major legislative changes.

Investors are still on edge over the Georgia vote, but were encouraged by an Institute for Supply Management survey of manufacturers that topped expectations.

“This is the type of news that investors love to see,” economist Joel Naroff said in a note.

“The economy may not be able to stand on its own just yet, but it is inching its way to that point and with vaccinations beginning (though much too slowly), there is a light beginning to be seen as we move through the tunnel.”

Among individual companies, General Motors jumped 2.8% after reporting better-than-expected fourth-quarter car sales and offered an optimistic outlook for 2021.

Petroleum-linked equities surged as Saudi Arabia announced an unexpected production cut that boosted oil prices. Apache jumped 9.6% and Halliburton surged 8.4%.

Qualcomm rose 2.7% after the chipmaker announced that Steve Mollenkopf will retire as chief executive and be replaced by President Cristiano Amon.

Dow member IBM climbed 1.9% after the company appointed former Goldman Sachs executive Gary Cohn as vice-chairman. Cohn served as an economic policy adviser to outgoing President Donald Trump for the first year-and-a-half of his administration. – AFP, January 6, 2021

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