Dow rallies to new 5-year high
@CNNMoneyInvest February 27, 2013: 4:19 PM ET
NEW YORK (CNNMoney)
A rally on Wall Street gained momentum late Wednesday as investors welcomed more upbeat housing data and a second day of dovish testimony from the chairman of the Federal Reserve.
The Dow Jones industrial
average rallied 175 points, or 1.2%, to end at its highest level since
October 2007. The S&P 500 jumped
1.3% and the Nasdaq gained 1%.
Traders said the rally was a continuation of
Tuesday's advance, which came after Fed
chairman Ben Bernanke signaled to lawmakers that the central bank's easy
money policies would remain in force. Bernanke reiterated his argument Wednesday
that the Fed's bond-buying program, known as QE, has helped the economy.
"There's nothing specific to cite," said Dan Greenhaus, market strategist at
BTIG in New York. "But if you had to pin it to something, it would be Bernanke
saying QE will continue in an environment of improving economic data." Stocks have been pulling back lately, after a strong start to the year. All three indexes are still up between 6% to 7% so far this year.
Investors also cheered further signs of strength in the housing market.
A realtors group said Wednesday that pending home
sales rose in January to the highest level since April 2010. The pending home
sales data came one day after reports on home
prices and sales came in better than expected.
Homebuilder stocks rallied Wednesday, with shares
of Hovnanian (HOV)
jumping 5%, leading rivals Toll Brothers (TOL),
DR Horton (DHI)
and Lennar (LEN).
The housing data overshadowed a mixed report on new orders for long-lasting
goods. The U.S. Census Bureau said durable goods orders dropped $11.8 billion, or 5.2%, in January. This was a steeper decline that the decrease of 3.5% projected by economists. However, excluding transportation, new orders would have increased 1.9%.
Overall, the durable goods data were "far better than the headline decline suggests," said Paul Ashworth, chief U.S. economist at Capital Economics.
Investors were also encouraged by a successful
auction of €6.5 billion in Italian government bonds. Wednesday's bond
That helped push European
markets higher. Italy has been a concern
for investors since elections over the weekend raised concerns about the
government's commitment to economic reforms.
Shares of Groupon (GRPN)
plunged more than 20% after the online coupon site widely missed forecasts and
said sales in the current quarter would fall short of estimates.
Apple shareholders did not vote on a controversial
proposal that would have limited the company's ability to issue preferred
stock. Hedge fund manager David Einhorn, who had launched an activist
campaign to unlock some of Apple's $137 billion cash hoard. Apple will put
that to a vote at a later date.
Shares of Priceline (PCLN)
rose after the online travel site beat profit forecasts.
First Solar (FSLR)
shares sank after the renewable energy firm missed sales forecasts.
Shares of Dollar Tree (DLTR,
Fortune
500) jumped after the discount retailer said it earned $1.01 per
share on sales of $2.25 billion in the fourth quarter.
Gun maker Sturm Ruger (RGR)
will report results after the closing bell, along with J.C. Penney
(JCP,
Fortune
500), among others.
Asian markets
ended mixed. Japan's Nikkei lost
1.3%, while the Shanghai
Composite added 0.9% and Hong Kong's Hang Seng
increased 0.2%.
Oil prices edged higher
while gold prices
slipped.
The dollar fell versus
the euro and the pound, but gained against the yen.
The yield on the 10-year Treasury note
rose to 1.9% from 1.88%.
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