Manufacturing data boosts US stocks
US stocks climbed today after strong manufacturing data and encouraging reports about the Greek debt crisis.
The Dow Jones industrial average closed within 100 points of its post-2008 financial crisis peak.
Factories raised output in January by the most in seven months, according to the Institute for Supply Managementâs manufacturing index. And the Commerce Department said construction spending rose 1.5% in December, the fifth straight monthly gain.
âThis is a market that is hungry for good news, and when it gets it, it responds very positively,â said Alan Gayle, senior investment strategist for RidgeWorth Investments.
The Dow Jones industrial average rose 83.55 points, or 0.7%, to close at 12,716.46. Earlier in the day, the Dow was up 151 points but it moved less than 100 points for the day for the 20th consecutive trading session.
The Dowâs highest close since 2008 is 12,810, in April 2011.
The broader Standard & Poorâs 500 index rose 11.68 points, or 0.9%, to close at 1,324.09. All 10 categories in the S&P 500 rose. The biggest gainer was financial stocks, up 1.6%.
The Nasdaq rose 34.43 points, or 1.2%, to 2,848.27.
Yesterday, stocks wrapped up their best January in 15 years. The Dow gained 4.1%. Investors are less worried about the European debt crisis, and earnings at American companies are generally meeting expectations.
âIt doesnât take good newsâ to make stock prices rise, said Randy Warren, chief investment officer for Warren Financial Service. âIt just takes an absence of bad news.â
For US and European companies, the price-to-earnings ratio, one measure of how expensive stocks are compared with profits, had been at low levels that assumed the worst about Europe.
âThese are Depression-era valuations, and something has to give,â Mr Warren said.
Plenty can still go wrong. Greece faces a multibillion dollar bond payment on March 20 that it cannot pay without additional help.
Greece and the International Monetary Fund said today that negotiations to reduce Greeceâs debt should wrap up within days, raising hopes that it can avoid a default.
In the United States, monthly hiring figures from private payroll agency ADP were so-so. ADP said private-sector employment rose by 170,000 in January from the previous month. That was 10,000 fewer jobs than expected by analysts surveyed by FactSet.
ADP also said December job growth was smaller than it previously reported - 292,000 instead of 325,000. The government releases its report on January job creation on Friday.
Investors also looked past a cautious outlook from temporary employee provider ManpowerGroup. Its stock jumped 14% after fourth-quarter profits came in much higher than expected.
But the company said that while hiring may increase this spring, the European debt crisis could slow job creation. It predicted lower profits in the current quarter than Wall Street had expected.






