Dow, S&P 500, Nasdaq climb to cap winning month as strong earnings, easing rates fuel Amazon, tech stocks
US stocks bounced back Friday, with Wall Street notching weekly and monthly wins as investors embraced strong earnings from Amazon (AMZN) that eased some doubts about prospects for Big Tech.
The Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) rose 0.6%, while the S&P 500 (^GSPC) gained 0.3%, both restoring solid gains after wavering earlier in the session. The Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI), which includes fewer tech stocks, rose 0.1%.
All three major averages ended the month with wins, with the Nasdaq gaining more than 5% for a second month in a row. The tech-heavy index scored its seventh consecutive monthly victory, while the S&P 500 and Dow notched their sixth month of wins in a row. All three indexes ended with solid weekly gains, as well.
Fresh “Magnificent Seven” earnings reports rekindled optimism for sustained growth for tech megacaps, easing concerns about overspending on AI infrastructure.
Amazon shares rose around 10% and closed at an all-time high, after its third quarter results easily topped analysts’ forecasts. In particular, its cloud division, Amazon Web Services, posted a 20% jump in revenue, signaling renewed strength in enterprise demand.
Apple (AAPL) also tapped its own record on the heels of stronger-than-expected results and upbeat guidance for the all-important holiday quarter. The stock hit a high above $277 shortly after the market open but quickly reversed direction.
Elsewhere in tech, Nvidia (NVDA) shares fluctuated as the company made a fresh push into South Korea, saying it would supply as many as 260,000 of its AI chips to companies and the country’s government. Meanwhile, shares in Netflix (NFLX) held onto gains after the media giant announced a 10-for-1 stock split.
Federal Reserve officials stepped up to speak for the first time since this week’s meeting, which brought an interest rate cut and revealed deepening divisions among policymakers. Kansas City Fed president Jeff Schmid said he would have preferred to hold rates steady, as inflation is “too high.” Dallas Fed president Lorie Logan, who is not a voting member this year, said Friday that she would have preferred to hold steady.
Traders are paring bets on a rate cut in December. Just over 60% now expect one, compared with over 90% one week ago.
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