S&P 500, Nasdaq and Russell 2000 close at record highs

S&P 500, Nasdaq and Russell 2000 close at record highs

Wall Street has ended a week of milestones with a few more on Friday.

The benchmark S&P 500 index closed at an all-time high, just two days after the current bull market in US stocks became the longest in history.

The Nasdaq composite and the Russell 2000 indexes also ended the day at all-time highs.

Technology companies, the best-performing sector in the market this year, accounted for much of the gains.

The price of oil snapped a seven-week losing streak, finishing this week about 5% higher.

The rally capped another solid week for the stock market, which has been riding a wave of strong corporate earnings even amid uncertainty over simmering global trade tensions.

“It appears that the market is really focusing on fundamentals,” said Rob Eschweiler, global investment specialist at JP Morgan Private Bank. “We’re at the very tail end of earnings season and there’s no other way to characterise the earnings season other than ‘spectacular.’”

The S&P 500 index gained 17.71 points, or 0.6%, to 2,874.69. It has now finished with a weekly gain in seven out of the last eight weeks.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 133.37 points, or 0.5%, to 25,790.35. The 30-company average is still below the high it set in January.

The Nasdaq added 67.52 points, or 0.9%, to 7,945.98. Its previous all-time high was set on July 25. The Russell 2000 index of smaller-company stocks picked up 8.62 points, or 0.5%, to 1,725.67. It also notched back-to-back all-time highs earlier this week.

Since entering a correction in early February, which is defined as a loss of 10% or more from a peak, the S&P 500 has mostly crawled higher, with some bumps along the way, thanks to a still-recovering economy and a boom in corporate profits.

More recently, stocks have been buffeted by concerns about mounting trade tensions this spring and summer, particularly with China.

But investors have increasingly focused on strong corporate earnings growth.

Earnings at S&P 500 companies have surged 23% in the first half of this year versus the same period a year earlier, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence.

The string of all-time highs for the indexes underscore the resilience of the US stock market’s bull run, which began in 2009 and became the longest on record on Wednesday.

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