The stock market extended a streak of erratic trading Wednesday, rebounding from early losses and rising moderately after a drop in oil inventories lifted hopes for an economic recovery.
All of the major stock indexes finished with gains of less than 1 percent.
The day began with a sharp slide driven by a plunge in China's biggest stock market and followed a trading pattern seen in markets around the world this week. Stocks have alternately advanced and retreated as investors shuttle between worries about the economy's challenges, namely consumer spending and high unemployment, and nascent signs of healing.
While the surprising decline in crude inventories was reassuring, there is still plenty of caution among investors. Even as stocks recovered, Treasury prices held on to most of their gains. Government debt is a safe-haven investment in a struggling economy.
Analysts say the financial markets are likely to bounce around in the near term as investors try to reconcile their hopes for an economic recovery with the reality that it might not come as fast or be as strong as many people expected.
"Volatility is creeping up," said Brian Nick, investment strategist at Barclays Wealth. "For a while we were seeing volatility steadily declining and maybe we thought we were completely out of the woods when we were not completely out of the woods."
The Dow Jones industrials rose 61.22, or 0.7 percent, to 9,279.16. The Standard & Poor's 500 index rose 6.79, or 0.7 percent, to 996.46, while the Nasdaq composite index rose 13.32, or 0.7 percent, to 1,969.24.
No comments:
Post a Comment