US stocks closed higher on Thursday as investors reacted to economic data and took cautious hope from Washington's latest promises for long-awaited details of a tax reform plan.
The S&P 500 has been building momentum this week, notching five days of gains for the first time in three months as investors showed confidence a day after the benchmark closed above its 50-day moving average. This was a technical level that acted as resistance in the past week.
“People are coming back from vacation and noticing the market is near its all-time highs still, that a hurricane and all the North Korea bluster didn't impact it,” said Michael Antonelli, managing director, institutional sales trading at Robert W. Baird in Milwaukee.
“There's no doubt that the market is still in an uptrend. We've been throwing all sorts of bricks into the wall of worry and it's still reaching for the sky.”
The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 55.67 points, or 0.25 per cent, to end at 21,948.1, the S&P 500 gained 14.06 points, or 0.57 per cent, to 2,471.65 and the Nasdaq Composite added 60.35 points, or 0.95 per cent, to 6,428.66.
For the month, the S&P edged up 0.05 per cent, while the Dow gained 0.28 per cent and Nasdaq rose 1.27 per cent.
Trump's tax reform
US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin had said on Thursday that President Donald Trump's administration has a detailed plan on tax reform and is on track to implement it by year-end. On Wednesday Trump had reiterated his call for a US corporate tax rate cut to 15 per cent from 35 per cent.
“Even if investors aren't taking him at his word they expect him to do all he can. This is a market that has heard tax reform so often. It wants to see if they can deliver,” Quincy Krosby, chief market strategist at Prudential Financial in Newark, NJ.
Investors were also focused on economic indicators such as Wednesday's gross domestic product data.
US annual inflation
Data released Thursday showed annual inflation advanced at its slowest pace in more than 1-1/2 years, diminishing expectations of an interest rate increase in December. And US consumer spending, which accounts for more than two-thirds of US economic activity, increased 0.3 per cent last month compared with forecasts of 0.4 per cent.
The data “reinforced the belief that the bull market is still intact,” according to Robert W. Baird's Antonelli.
Payrolls data
Also investors awaited the monthly jobs report on Friday to gauge the strength of the labour market and look for clues on the Federal Reserve's next move on interest rates.
Ten of the 11 major S&P sectors were higher, with the health index's 1.5 per cent rise leading the advancers.
UnitedHealth's 1.5 per cent gain provided the biggest boost to the Dow. The Nasdaq biotech index rose 2.8 per cent, with the biggest boosts coming from Gilead, Celgene and Biogen , all of which rose more than 3 per cent.
Dollar General fell 5.4 per cent after reporting a slide in second-quarter margins.
Campbell Soup slid 8.1 per cent, the biggest percentage loser on the S&P, after the company warned that sales for fiscal 2018 could fall.
The S&P 500 posted 49 new 52-week highs and 10 new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 117 new highs and 21 new lows.
About 6.2 billion shares changed hands on US exchanges on Thursday compared with the 5.8 billion average for the last 20 sessions.