Dow climbs 100 points, hits record high as tech stocks bounce

U.S. stocks inched higher on Monday as technology stocks tried to recover from a wobbly performance last week.

The Dow Jones industrial average gained 100 points and hit a record, surpassing a previous all-time high of 21,391.97, which was set last week. The S&P 500 gained 0.6 percent to als trade at a record, with information technology rising 1.5 percent to lead advancers. The Nasdaq composite outperformed, rising 1.2 percent.

Large-cap technology stocks like Facebook, Amazon, Apple, Netflix and Google-parent Alphabet all rose more than 1 percent in early trade. Last week, valuation concerns sent the overall sector lower by around 0.8 percent. Tech is by far the best-performing sector of the year, rising 17.2 percent in the period.

“I don’t know where the optimism is coming from. That’s not to say we should be negative. I just don’t see any reason for excessive optimism or pessimism right now,” said Randy Frederick, vice president of trading and derivatives at Charles Schwab.

There are no major economic data due Monday, but Wall Street paid attention to remarks from a key Federal Reserve official.

Before the bell, New York Fed President Bill Dudley said the central bank inflation should pick up as wages rise along with continuing improvement in the labor market.

Treasury yields erased earlier losses following Dudley’s statement, with the benchmark 10-year yield climbing to 2.17 percent.

Dudley made his remarks less than a week after the Fed raised rates for the second time this year. Investors, however, are skeptical the central bank will be able to further tighten in September. Market expectations for a September rate hike are just 13 percent, according to the CME Group’s FedWatch tool.

Overseas, European stocks rose broadly after French President Emmanuel Macron’s party won a parliamentary majority. The pan-European Stoxx 600 index rose 0.76 percent, while the French CAC 40 advanced nearly 1 percent.

“I think there’s a bit of a sense of relief that Macron won the majority,” said Jeremy Klein, chief market strategist at FBN Securities. “Europe had been treading water recently and now it looks like it’s reverting higher.”

Source: CNBC

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