Stocks Rise on Wall Street, Holding Near Their Record Highs

Stocks Rise on Wall Street, Holding Near Their Record Highs
The Fearless Girl statue faces the New York Stock Exchange in New York on July 20, 2021. (Richard Drew/AP Photo)
The Associated Press
8/30/2021
Updated:
8/30/2021

Stocks rose on Wall Street Monday and remained near record highs set last week after investors welcomed an update from the Federal Reserve.

The central bank signaled that it will maintain low interest rates as the economy continues recovering from the pandemic. Markets have been choppy as investors tried to gauge how much and how quickly the Fed will ease its support.

The S&P 500 rose 0.5 percent as of 11:30 a.m. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 34 points, or 0.1 percent, to 35,489 and the Nasdaq rose 0.8 percent.

Technology stocks, which benefit from low interest rates, did much of the heavy lifting for the broader market. Health care companies also had solid gains and helped lift the benchmark S&P 500.

Bond yields edged lower. The yield on the 10-year Treasury fell to 1.29 percent from 1.31 percent late Friday.

Energy prices were mixed as the the full impact of Hurricane Ida is still being assessed. The storm will likely take a toll on the energy, chemical, and shipping industries that have major hubs along the Gulf Coast, but the impact on the overall U.S. economy should be modest so long as damage estimates don’t rise sharply and refinery shutdowns are not prolonged, economists suggested.

Crude oil prices rose 0.1 percent, while natural gas prices slumped 3.1 percent as Colonial Pipeline shut down deliveries in the south until it can assess damage from the storm.

Deal news helped lift several stocks. Affirm soared 45.5 percent after the payments company announced a deal last week with Amazon to offer shoppers a buy-now-pay-later option that doesn’t involve credit cards. Hill-Rom Holdings jumped 10.5 percent following reports that Baxter International is interested in buying the medical technology company.

Investors have several key economic reports to look forward to this week, including consumer confidence on Tuesday and the closely watched monthly employment survey from the Labor Department on Friday. Both could help investors better gauge the economic recovery’s path as it faces some resistance from a surge in virus cases because of the more contagious delta variant.

By Damian J. Troise