The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed up nearly 300 points points, or 0.7%, at 41,393.78. The blue-chip index had jumped more than 400 points. It closed at a record of 41,563.08 on Aug. 30.
The S&P 500 gained 0.5%, and the Nasdaq advanced 0.7%. All three major benchmark indexes traded near two-week highs and logged solid weekly gains.
Traders’ bets on a 50-basis point rate cut jumped to 47% from 28% on Thursday, CME’s FedWatch Tool showed, after former New York Fed President Bill Dudley said late Thursday there was a strong case for a 50-bps interest rate cut.
Media reports had said early Thursday the size of the cut was “a close call.”
“There’s just rumblings that have started to bubble up again that the discussion in the Fed is leaving 50 basis points on the table,” Jim Baird, chief investment officer with Plante Moran Financial Advisors, Southfield, Michigan.
Prior to this, bets on the Fed sticking to a smaller 25-bps cut firmed on Thursday following news of slightly higher producer prices following August consumer prices data.
While the renewed hopes for a bigger cut were boosting large cap indexes on Friday they were most evident in the Russell 2000 small cap index, which was up 1.8%. Smaller companies are more sensitive to interest rate changes as they depend more on borrowed money and floating rate loans.
Baird argued that trading on Friday appeared to show investor optimism that a 50 basis point cut would not indicate a coming recession.
“If investors were looking at this and saying they have to move quicker because they’re behind the curve you wouldn’t see risk assets like small caps rally,” said Baird. “You’re seeing some of the riskier areas of the equity market advance pretty strongly today.”
A survey showed US consumer sentiment improved in September as inflation subsided, though Americans remained cautious ahead of the November presidential election.
Photoshop maker Adobe, down 8.5%, was the S&P 500’s biggest percentage decliner after forecasting fourth-quarter earnings below estimates.
Chinese e-commerce firm PDD Holdings lost 2.4% after the Biden administration said it was moving to curb low-value shipments entering the US duty-free under the $800 “de minimis” threshold.
Uber gained 6.5% after the ride-hailing platform said it would bring autonomous ride hailing to Austin, Texas, and Atlanta in partnership with Alphabet’s Waymo.
For top headlines, breaking news and more, visit nypost.com.
Get updates delivered to you daily. Free and customizable.
It’s essential to note our commitment to transparency:
Our Terms of Use acknowledge that our services may not always be error-free, and our Community Standards emphasize our discretion in enforcing policies. As a platform hosting over 100,000 pieces of content published daily, we cannot pre-vet content, but we strive to foster a dynamic environment for free expression and robust discourse through safety guardrails of human and AI moderation.