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U.S. stocks clawed back from a downbeat start to the trading week Monday as Wall Street looked to extend a summer rally that saw equity markets log their longest winning streak in 10 months in Friday's session.
The S&P 500 rose 0.4% after the benchmark index marked its fourth straight week of gains, officially recouping half of its bear market losses since plunging from its all-time high in January. The Dow Jones Industrial Average added 150 points, or roughly 0.5%, and the Nasdaq Composite gained 0.6%.
Investors look ahead to a busy week for retail, with earnings due out from Walmart (WMT) before Wednesday's open to kick reporting off for the sector.
Shares of Disney (DIS) climbed 2.2% after Daniel Loeb's Third Point revealed a new stake in the company and urged CEO Bob Chapek in a letter to make a series of changes, including integrating Hulu directly into the Disney+ DTC platform and acquiring Comcast’s remaining minority stake before the early 2024 deadline. The letter also recommended ESPN be spun off to shareholders to help its parent company pay off debt.
The Federal Reserve Bank of New York’s general business conditions index, a measure of the state's manufacturing activity, posted its second largest drop since 2001, with declines in orders and shipments reflecting a dramatic drop in demand. The gauge fell more than 42 points to -31.3, the second-worst drop in more than two decades after April 2020's print. The reading came in weaker than the lowest economist estimate, according to Bloomberg data. Readings below zero indicate a contraction.
Elsewhere in economic data, the National Association of Home Buyers/Wells Fargo homebuilder sentiment index also disappointed — falling by 6 points to 49 in August. The reading came in lower than Bloomberg's most downbeat economist forecast and below the breakeven measure of 50 for the first time since May 2020.
Investors have cheered on the summer's rally after a series of better-than-expected economic releases renewed optimism on Wall Street. But some strategists remain skeptical of the market rebound as risks associated with inflation and monetary tightening persist.
“The macro, policy and earnings set-up is much less favorable for equities today,” Morgan Stanley’s Michael J. Wilson wrote in a note. “The risk/reward is unattractive and this bear market remains incomplete.”
Overseas, data out of China on Monday showed a slowdown in economic activity across the board last month. The world’s second largest economy saw retail sales, industrial output and investment all come in lower than economists expected in July.