Wall Street Ends Week On High Note

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2020-04-18 HKT 04:40

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  • All three major US indices finished the week higher, as the White House pushed for the US economy to reopen. Photo: Reuters

    All three major US indices finished the week higher, as the White House pushed for the US economy to reopen. Photo: Reuters

Wall Street stocks finished sharply higher on Friday, closing out a second week of gains as US officials moved forward with plans to gradually reopen the economy.

The Dow Jones added more than 700 points, or 3.0 percent, ending at 24,242.

The S&P 500 gained 2.7 percent to 2,874, while the Nasdaq advanced 1.4 percent to 8,650.

Analysts pointed to a number of positive catalysts, including a report of promising research on a Gilead Sciences drug to treat the coronavirus, Boeing's announcement that it will resume US commercial plane production and the release of a White House blueprint to reopen the economy.

In one of the first moves by a major US state, Texas Governor Greg Abbott approved retailers to employ a "to go" model that requires reopened stores to deliver items to customers' cars or homes.

But Abbott said Texas schools would remain closed for the remainder of the 2019-2020 school year.

TD Ameritrade Chief Market Strategist JJ Kinahan cautioned investors not to expect the recovery to come quickly.

"Investors seem optimistic that there's light at the end of the tunnel," Kinahan said. "Investors should be cautious though, as the 'getting going' might end up being slower than expected."

All three major US indices finished the week higher, shrugging off atrocious economic data, including another spike in jobless claims and a big drop in retail sales.

Boeing jumped 14.5 percent after announcing it will begin to ramp production back up at its Washington state commercial plane plants, bringing back around 27,000 workers.

Gilead surged 9.7 percent following a news report about promising research on an antiviral medication from the drugmaker being tested to treat the coronavirus.

Apple dropped 1.4 percent following a downgrade from Goldman Sachs, which predicted weak demand for iPhones due to the economic slowdown. (AFP)

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