Stocks Snap Five-Day Drop as Dollar Retreats: Markets Wrap

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(Bloomberg) -- Investors have finally been induced to buy the dip in US stocks. After a five-day drop that shaved more than a trillion dollars off share prices, Wall Street put the longest equities losing streak since April behind it.

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The Nasdaq 100 clawed back losses on Friday, climbing 1.7% while the S&P 500 rose 1.3%. The gains managed to put a dent in the week’s selloff after an end of December rout had stretched into the first trading day of the year. Traders shrugged off warnings about slowing earnings growth for the tech stocks dubbed the Magnificent Seven and continued to snap up shares of AI juggernaut Nvidia Corp.

“For as long as retail investors continue to pour money into the AI theme, the AI led boom in stock markets is likely to continue,” JPMorgan strategists led by Nikolaos Panigirtzoglou told clients. To track the mood of day traders they advised watching flows into Invesco’s Nasdaq-tracking exchange-traded fund (QQQ) and a fund from GraniteShares, which provides twice the daily returns of Nvidia (NVDL).

Stocks reached session highs in the afternoon as the reelection of Mike Johnson to House speaker suggested Republicans will be able to coalesce behind the president-elect’s business-friendly deregulatory agenda. Bond yields pushed higher with the benchmark 10-year touching 4.6% after Richmond Fed President Tom Barkin suggested his preference was to keep rates restrictive for longer.

Earlier data showed US manufacturing rose at a modest pace in the final month of 2024. The Institute for Supply Management’s gauge hit 49.3, topping estimates, but remained below 50, a level that indicates economic expansion. New orders rose to the highest since the start of last year. Treasuries dipped after the report while stocks held onto gains.

Investors sieving through data to find signs the world’s largest economy was still going strong had to weigh that against the prospect of slower and shallower interest-rate cuts after Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell’s hawkish pivot in December.

Vital Knowledge’s Adam Crisafulli said the ISM readout was incrementally positive but “but it will reinforce worries about hawkish policy and elevated yields.”

Such concerns saw volatility reemerge this week as the S&P 500 notched intraday gains in the previous two sessions, only to close lower. Lighter holiday trading amplified the moves.