Wall St closes higher fuelled by tech rally, soft inflation data

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Traders working on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange, in New York City, on Dec 17.

Traders working on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange in New York City on Dec 17.

PHOTO: REUTERS

Follow topic:
  • Wall Street rose as a soft CPI report fuelled expectations of Federal Reserve interest rate cuts in 2024.
  • Micron's strong AI demand forecast boosted tech stocks like SanDisk and Western Digital, lifting the Philadelphia SE Semiconductor Index.
  • Lululemon surged after activist investor Elliott acquired a US$1 billion stake; Trump Media & Technology jumped on merger news.

AI generated

- Wall Street’s main indexes closed higher on Dec 18 as a soft inflation report fed expectations for interest rate cuts by the Federal Reserve, while chipmaker Micron’s blowout forecast signalled strong AI demand.

The Consumer Price Index (CPI) report showed that consumer prices increased less than expected in the year to November. The Labour Department’s Bureau of Labour Statistics did not publish month-to-month CPI changes after the 43-day shutdown of the government prevented the collection of October data.

“The constructive CPI report... starts to ease pressure on policymakers further to potentially get more comfortable cutting rates next year,” said Mr Bill Merz, head of capital markets research at US Bank’s Asset Management Group. “We’ll want to see follow-through next month to ensure there wasn’t too much noise from the shutdown.”

The three major indexes rebounded from three-week lows. And the Russell 2000 index, tracking rate-sensitive smallcaps, also advanced.

A jobless claims report showed new applications fell last week, reversing the prior week’s surge and suggesting labour market conditions remained stable in December. Earlier this week, an official jobs report showed US job growth rebounded in November and the unemployment rate rose to 4.6 per cent.

Traders now see a 58 per cent chance for a dovish policy move by the Fed in March, according to CME’s FedWatch Tool.

According to preliminary data, the S&P 500 gained 52.48 points, or 0.78 per cent, to end at 6,773.91 points, while the Nasdaq Composite gained 311.60 points, or 1.37 per cent, to 23,004.92.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 69.36 points, or 0.14 per cent, to 47,955.33.

Consumer discretionary stocks gained as Lululemon surged on a report that activist investor Elliott has acquired more than a US$1 billion (S$1.29 billion) stake in the athletic-wear company. Starbucks also rallied.

Among tech stocks, Micron Technology jumped after the company forecast quarterly profit at nearly double what analysts were expecting on strong artificial intelligence-related demand.

Other memory companies including SanDisk and Western Digital also surged, while the Philadelphia SE Semiconductor Index climbed.

Companies’ massive debt-backed spending on developing AI technology and uncertainty about how they plan to monetise it have plagued risk-taking this quarter.

Oracle rose, recovering from a fall on Dec 17 when funding plans for a Stargate data centre sparked a broad equities sell-off.

Trump Media & Technology jumped after the company and fusion power company TAE Technologies said they have

agreed to combine in an all-stock deal

valued at more than US$6 billion. REUTERS

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