Stocks traded mixed Monday, with the S&P 500 and Nasdaq ticking up to notch fresh record levels, with traders looking ahead to more key economic data later this week.
The S&P 500 edged up to a record intraday high, adding to gains after the blue-chip index posted its best week since February. The Nasdaq also rose to a record intraday level, while the Dow was off slightly. Treasury yields traded lower across the long end of the curve, with the benchmark 10-year Treasury yield hovering below 1.5%. Major cryptocurrencies steadied after sliding last week, and and bitcoin (BTC-USD) and ethereum (ETH-USD), the two largest cryptocurrencies by market cap, each advanced.
Investors this week will be focused on a busy economic calendar headlined by the June jobs report on Friday. Consensus economists are looking for payroll gains to accelerate to 700,000 in June with an unemployment rate down slightly to 5.7%, with these metrics improving against May's payroll gains of 559,000 and jobless rate of 5.8%.
Stocks are coming into this week with the momentum of a record-setting run last week, with both the S&P 500 and Nasdaq setting fresh all-time highs. This in turn came as traders considered a new compromise deal reached on infrastructure in the Biden administration, and a Fed outlook that suggested central bank officials would move to stave off possibly longer-lasting inflation with interest hikes in the next two years.
"We finally have a few catalysts that are pushing this market forward," Jay Jacobs, senior vice president and head of research and strategy at Global X ETFs, told Yahoo Finance. "We had a pretty trend-less May and the beginning of June, but now we have the Fed recognizing inflation and pulling forward its interest rate increases, which should fight it. And now we have the infrastructure bill that Biden has agreed with with bipartisan senators. So that's two really positive catalysts that I think are going to continue to propel the markets into the summer."
And in the coming weeks, investors will also have the backdrop of what is setting up to be another strong batch of quarterly corporate earnings results, with a greater number of companies poised to have benefitted from the broadening vaccinations and economic reopenings taking place in the second quarter. As of Friday, 66 of 103 S&P 500 companies that issued earnings per share guidance for the second quarter offered a positive outlook that exceeded consensus estimates, according to FactSet data. This would mark the highest number of S&P 500 companies offering an estimates-topping outlook ever recorded in data going back to 2006.
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9:36 a.m. ET: Stocks open mostly higher, S&P 500 and Nasdaq set fresh record highs
The three major indexes were mixed at the open Monday morning, with the Dow trading lower while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq moved up to reach all-time highs.
The information technology sector led gains in the S&P 500, while the cyclical industrials, financials and energy sectors lagged. The Nasdaq outperformed as tech stocks gained, with the index moving higher by 0.7%.
U.S. West Texas intermediate crude oil futures retreated but still hovered near a two-year high of over $73 per barrel. Gold prices ticked up, while the 10-year Treasury yield fell by 4.4 basis points to yield 1.492%.
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7:25 a.m. ET Monday: Stock futures trade mixed
Here's where markets were trading ahead of the opening bell on Monday:
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S&P 500 futures (ES=F): 4,272.75, +1.5 points (+0.04%)
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Dow futures (YM=F): 34,301.00, -32 points (-0.09%)
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Nasdaq futures (NQ=F): 14,372.25, +33.25 points (+0.23%)
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Crude (CL=F): -$0.07 (-0.09%) to $73.98 a barrel
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Gold (GC=F): -$0.20 (-0.01%) to $1,777.60 per ounce
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10-year Treasury (^TNX): -2.7 bps to yield 1.509%
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Emily McCormick is a reporter for Yahoo Finance. Follow her on Twitter: @emily_mcck
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Stock market news live updates: S&P 500 and Nasdaq eke out record highs as traders await week of key economic data - Yahoo Finance
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