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S&P 500 Eyes Record Close as Big Tech Edges Higher, Healthcare Rallies

Published 12/29/2021, 02:24 PM
Updated 12/29/2021, 03:43 PM
© Reuters.

By Yasin Ebrahim

Investing.com – The S&P 500 edged higher Wednesday, to remain on course for a closing record after big tech cut intraday losses and a Biogen-fueled rally in healthcare bolstered stocks.

The S&P 500 rose 0.3%, the Dow Jones Industrial Average added 0.4%, or 160 points, the Nasdaq slipped 0.1%.

Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT), Google-parent Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL), Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) cut intraday losses, while Facebook (NASDAQ:FB), and Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) were well off their session lows. 

In Chinese tech, however, Alibaba (NYSE:BABA) fell more than 2% following a Bloomberg report that the e-commerce giant was in early talks to sell part or all of its stake in social media platform company Weibo (NASDAQ:WB) to Shanghai Media Group.

In health care, Biogen (NASDAQ:BIIB) jumped nearly 10% intraday after the Korea Economic Daily reported that the company was in talks about a possible to sale to electronics giants Samsung.

Energy was a drag on the broader market even as oil prices rebounded from session lows after weekly U.S. petroleum data showed a larger than expected fall in crude stockpiles and ramp-up in production.  

Schlumberger (NYSE:SLB), ONEOK (NYSE:OKE), Baker Hughes (NYSE:BKR) were among the biggest decliners.

Airline stocks continued to trade to the tune of Omicron-led data as Delta Air Lines (NYSE:DAL) and Alaska Air (NYSE:ALK) cancelled hundreds of flights amid rising cases of Omicron variant and weather conditions.

The U.S. hit a record seven-day case average of 262,034 cases on Tuesday, surpassing the prior record of 251,232 cases seen in January this year.

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As the broader market remains within touching distance of its notching its 70th record high, some on Wall Street continue to expect more of the same in the new year.

“If the S&P 500 ends near current levels, next year we could see a total return (index appreciation plus dividends) in the 10% to 12% range based on our current work,” Wells Fargo said.

“So even after a nice run higher this year, we see more upside through year-end 2022,” it added.

Latest comments

USA USA, the land of free money
 dont worry FED will fix it
 As long as FED prints money just buy bull and dont worry about anything
How this thing all ATH yet most stocks in my watchlist are not All times low but Murderd Wall Street and their friends are real Mafias
I think current stonk market environment is here to stay. 1% figured out how to manipulate the market via fed/inflation. Stonks will continue to go up 30 - 40% a year and non-market-participants will be doomed to watch their life savings disappear thanks to the fed.
They're manipulating the market with artificial intelligence. You're probably right. Crazy inflation here to stay.
FED fraud must end or we will have 20%inflation...
The Nasdaq, Dow and S&P have all grown by 50%-80% in the past 24 months despite US GDP flatlining, GDP is only due to recover to pre covid levels early next year (3.8% growth projected in 2022 and >2% in 2023 & 2024). PE Ratios are 35% - 40%+ above their long-term averages, US Debt versus GDP hasn't been this high since WW2, US Corp Debt versus GDP hasn't been this high in 40 years and US Inflation hasn't been this high in 40 years. Yet Wells Fargo sees a 10% - 12% upside in 2022???? Only if people all try to hide from growing inflation via the equity markets (and grow the bubble even higher until it bursts in 2023). You know that same inflation Powell said would be transitory until last month while he printed more debt. The market is FARRR overdue for a correction of about 35%+ to bring it back to its natural, not artificially inflated, levels.
 I am here in the US. Assume you are too?
 Not if those stocks are overvalued versus fundamentals and not when the only reason the bubble is so high is as the fed has pumped the market by QE and low-interest rates. The Fed has formed this bubble - it is now letting the bubble grow by not acting quick enough to cool down the money flow (only now admitting they got it 100% wrong on inflation). I HONESTLY think come 2023 once interest rates are 2%+ and the economy is getting off its stimulus high that the market bubble will crash back to levels seen as we entered covid. Anyone investing for the long term between 2020 and 2023 - needs to invest in solid shares and not speculative highly overvalued shares like say Tesla (I like Tesla but its current market value is about 3-4 years ahead of time with a PE Ratio of 352 - 10 times that of say Apple). Or companies who are putting this newfound liquidity to good use while they have it.
 I agreed with your read, Peter. I have a gnawing feeling that 2020 lows will revisit us before we take off again. I don't have too many compelling arguments for that aside from a stuttering GDP/soaring inflation, but you make a good case.
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