Stocks Pare Gains After S&P 500 Briefly Hits New Intraday High

Stocks eased off their best levels Tuesday after the S&P 500 briefly shot to a fresh intraday record, as investors digested the latest batch of economic reports.

Name

Price

 

Change

%Change

DJIA

Dow Jones Industrial Average

16521.08

 

63.42

0.39%

S&P 500

S&P 500 Index

1879.81

 

7.47

0.40%

NASDAQ

Nasdaq Composite Index

4247.98

 

48.98

1.17%

The Dow Jones Industrial Average held modest gains, led by Cisco andWalt Disney.

The S&P 500 and the Nasdaq were also in positive territory. The CBOE Volatility Index (VIX), widely considered the best gauge of fear in the market, slid near 13.

The Dow and S&P 500 are seeing their first three-day win streak since the end of February.

Stocks wrapped up a mixed first quarter, with the Dow ending in the red and the S&P and Nasdaq squeezing out moderate gains.

And with the start of a new month, investors are hoping that April will be brighter for stocks. According to market patterns, April is the best-performing month for the Dow, with the index posting an average gain of over 2 percent over the last 50 years.

U.S. manufacturing growth improved for the second month in March. The Institute for Supply Management (ISM) said its index of national factory activity rose to 53.7 in March, which was up slightly from February’s read of 53.2 but below the expected 54.0 reading in a Reuters poll.

“This is not much of a rebound but the components were mixed,” said Peter Boockvar, managing director at The Lindsey Group. “Bottom line, some normality in the economy was reflected in the data but the headline figure is still 1 point below its six-month average. I’m not sure if the further push higher in the S&P is because they liked the internals of the data or are more focused on the mediocre headline figure and weak employment component that could keep the Fed ever more dovish.”

Construction spending edged up just 0.1 percent to an annual rate of $945.7 billion in February, according to the Commerce Department. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast construction outlays to be flat.

Bond prices slipped near session lows following the economic reports.

Elsewhere, factory activity growth slowed slightly in March after nearing a four-year high in February, according to financial data firm Markit, with the final U.S. Manufacturing Purchasing Managers Index slipped to from 57.1 in February to 55.5. Readings above 50 indicate expansion.

General Motors will be in the hot seat in Washington on Tuesday, where CEO Mary Barra will testify before the House Energy and Commerce Committee about the company’s ignition troubles. Late Monday, the GM announced that it is recalling an additional 1.3 million vehicles for power steering issues.

Ford advanced after the automaker said March auto sales rose 3.4 percent, exceeding expectations. Japanese rival Toyota said sales rose 5 percent, also topping estimates.

Intuitive Surgical surged to lead the S&P 500 gainers after the FDA granted marketing clearance for the company’s da Vinci Xi Surgical System, a surgical platform designed to enable complex surgery using a minimally invasive approach.

Markets remain focused on the monthly jobs report, due on Friday, which is viewed as a key indicator in determining how rapidly the Federal Reserve quits its bond-buying program. Economists polled by Reuters expect a gain of 197,000 new jobs in March. The U.S. created 175,000 jobs in February, exceeding expectations.

Fed Chair Janet Yellen gave stocks a boost on Monday when she said the central bank would stay accommodative for some time. Her dovish comments countered an earlier statement to the effect that the Fed could raise interest rates within six months of ending its asset-buying program.

“The market has pushed up the timing of the first rate hike from August to May of 2015, and the Fed is clearly pushing back against that,” said John Briggs, head of cross-asset strategy at RBS. “If you get strong data, that divergence could widen, and if it’s weak data, the market is more likely to listen to the Fed’s dovish overtone.”

Meanwhile, emerging markets extended their rally, with the iShares MSCI Emerging Markets ETF higher for the ninth-consecutive session, up more than 7 percent.

Source: CNBC

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