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Saturday, October 26, 2024

Market Snapshot: Dow Jones jumps more than 300 points as investors await earnings, shake off Israel-Hamas war

Date:

U.S. stocks finished sharply higher on Monday as investors prepared for earnings season to move into full swing and unwound last week’s flight-to-safety trades on the Israel-Hamas war.

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What happened

  • The Dow Jones Industrial Average
    DJIA
    closed 314.25 points, or 0.9%, higher at 33,984.54. It was the sixth gain of the past seven trading sessions for Dow industrials.

  • The S&P 500
    SPX
    ended up by 45.85 points, or almost 1.1%, at 4,373.63.

  • The Nasdaq Composite
    COMP
    finished up by 160.75 points, or 1.2%, at 13,567.98.

Stocks finished mostly lower on Friday, with the Nasdaq Composite falling 0.2% for last week. However, the Dow Jones Industrial Average managed to break a streak of three consecutive weekly losses and the S&P 500 scored a second straight weekly gain.

What drove markets

Stocks gained as traditional havens, including gold, the U.S. dollar and Treasurys, all lost ground. Monday’s fall in Treasury prices meant a renewed rise in 2-
BX:TMUBMUSD02Y
through 30-year yields
BX:TMUBMUSD30Y.

Meanwhile, oil prices settled lower, after having jumped on Friday to their highest since the Hamas attack on Israel earlier this month. November West Texas Intermediate crude
CLX23,
-0.76%

fell $1.03, or 1.2%, to settle at $86.66 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Crude prices have remained below 2023 highs set in late September before the Hamas attack, and analysts expect oil to remain a bellwether for other asset prices.

See: Oil prices in spotlight as Iran warns of escalation of Israel-Hamas war

Equities held up on Monday despite the Middle East conflict “because the war is seen as having no major impact on U.S. markets yet unless it broadens out,” said Eric Sterner, chief investment officer at Apollon Wealth Management, which manages roughly $5.3 billion from Mount Pleasant, S.C.

There are also expectations that U.S. companies will “break out” of the recent earnings recession, Sterner said via phone. Earnings season got off to a positive start Friday, with results from major Wall Street players.

More of Wall Street’s big banks will report results on Tuesday, with Bank of America
BAC,
+0.86%
,
Goldman Sachs
GS,
+1.65%

and BNY Mellon
BK,
+1.60%

stepping up to the plate. Big tech results will start with Netflix
NFLX,
+1.45%

and Tesla
TSLA,
+1.12%

on Wednesday.

Earnings Watch: Wall Street’s Q3 expectations have been all over the place. Now, a swing to profit growth is ‘likely’ — with a bigger rebound next year

But jitters around the prospect of a broader war in the Middle East were likely to remain at least a background concern, analysts and investors said.

The Israel-Hamas war has a 70% chance of drawing in militant groups from Lebanon or Syria, or producing a direct conflict with Iran — creating more oil disruptions than financial markets currently think, according to Matt Gertken, chief geopolitical strategist for Montreal-based BCA Research.

Read: Israel-Gaza conflict threatens to reawaken U.S. inflation, investors worry

Israel continued to pound the Gaza Strip ahead of an expected ground invasion of the Hamas-controlled enclave. The prospect of a ground incursion has drawn warnings from Iran, which in turn was being told by Western leaders and diplomats not to escalate the conflict.

“The market is realizing that most military shocks since World War II have been local in nature, allowing the market to rebound quite swiftly after the initial selloff,” said Sam Stovall, chief investment strategist for CFRA Research in New York. “In addition, third-quarter earnings, like 54 of the past 56 quarters, should see actual results exceed end-of-quarter estimates. This should add to investor confidence,” he said via phone.

The S&P 500 has endured an earnings recession from the fourth quarter of 2022 through the second quarter of this year, though the actual data shows that it’s been shallower than analysts had expected, according to Stovall.

The New York Fed’s Empire State business-conditions index, a gauge of manufacturing activity in the state, edged down 6.5 points in October to negative 4.6, the regional Fed bank said Monday. Economists had expected a negative six reading, according to a survey by The Wall Street Journal. Any reading below zero indicates deteriorating conditions.

The benchmark 10-year Treasury yield
BX:TMUBMUSD10Y
jumped 8.1 basis points to finish at almost 4.71% as traders remained open to the idea that sturdy U.S. economic data and signs of sticky inflation will keep interest rates higher for longer.

Companies in focus

Jamie Chisholm contributed.

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