Market Snapshot: U.S. stocks end higher, S&P 500 books longest weekly win streak since August 2022 after bear-market exit

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U.S. stocks ended slightly higher Friday, with the S&P 500 index edging up after technically exiting bear-market territory a day earlier. All three major U.S. stock indexes booked small weekly gains, as investors await the Federal Reserve’s policy decision on interest rates.

How stock indexes traded

  • The Dow Jones Industrial Average
    DJIA,
    +0.13%

    rose 43.17 points, or 0.1%, to close at 33,876.78.

  • The S&P 500
    SPX,
    +0.11%

    gained 4.93 points, or 0.1%, to finish at 4,298.86.

  • The Nasdaq Composite
    COMP,
    +0.16%

    increased 20.62 points, or 0.2%, to end at 13,259.14.

For the week, the Dow rose 0.3%, the S&P 500 gained 0.4% and the Nasdaq advanced 0.1%. The technology-heavy Nasdaq eked out a seventh straight week of gains, its longest winning streak since November 2019, according to Dow Jones Market Data. The Dow booked back-to-back weekly gains, while the S&P 500 climbed for a fourth straight week in its longest winning streak since August 2022.

What drove markets

U.S. stocks finished higher Friday, with the S&P 500 booking a modest weekly gain, as investors looked ahead to the Federal Reserve’s upcoming policy meeting.

The S&P 500 exited bear-market territory on Thursday by closing 20% above last year’s trough in October. Although Wall Street cheered the milestone after a long, painful bear market, some are cautious about the technical exit.

Read: S&P 500 exits longest bear market since 1948. What stock-market history says about what happens next.

“We advise investors against assuming that the recent upswing in equities can gain momentum,” said Solita Marcelli, chief investment officer for the Americas, at UBS Global Wealth Management, in a note Friday. “Until markets reach a new all-time high, it’s impossible to know whether the bear market trough — the ultimate low of the market cycle — is behind us.”

James Demmert, CIO at Main Street Research, was also cautious.

“Even though the S&P 500 is up just over 20% from the October 2022 low, that does not mean the bear market is over yet,” Demmert said in emailed commentary Friday. “The bear markets of 2000 and 2008 both saw rallies in excess of 20%, which did not constitute the end of the bear market, as the market experienced further downside after those rallies.”

Read: ‘Too soon to price in a recovery’: Here’s Citi Global Wealth’s investing strategy for a bear market that it says is not over yet

Friday was relatively quiet, with little economic data, as investors turned their attention to next week when May inflation data and policy decisions from the Federal Reserve and European Central Bank are due.

Fed-funds futures on Friday were pointing to a 71.2% probability that the central bank will announce at the conclusion of its two-day policy meeting on June 14 that it’s pausing its interest-rate increases, according to the CME FedWatch Tool, at last check. Traders saw a 28.8% chance of a quarter-point rate hike by the Fed.

The Fed has been raising rates to combat high inflation.

The consumer-price index showed that inflation eased to a year-over-year rate of 4.9% in April, down from last year’s peak of 9.1% in June. The CPI reading for May will be released on Tuesday.

“Inflation is going in the right direction,” said Yung-Yu Ma, chief investment strategist at BMO Wealth Management, in a phone interview Friday. “I think we’ve seen the last of the rate increases.”

See: Fed might hike interest rates again in June instead of a ‘skip,’ some economists think

Also read: Odds of U.S. ‘hard landing’ rising after Fed’s refusal to pause rate hikes earlier this year, warns Cam Harvey

Five of the S&P 500’s 11 sectors closed higher Friday, with information technology posting the strongest performance with a 0.5% gain, according to FactSet data. The materials sector had the biggest decline, down 0.8%.

The Cboe Volatility Index
VIX,
+1.32%
,
known as the Vix, was trading around 13.8 on Friday, below its long-run average of about 20 after hitting its lowest level since February 2020.

In One Chart: Here’s the main driver of the S&P 500’s bull-market rally, according to Fundstrat’s Tom Lee

The Vix, also known as the stock market’s fear gauge, is “pretty low,” said Ma.

“We’re still getting the recession that continues to perpetually be six months away,” he said. The market is making “somewhat of a valiant attempt to climb a wall of worry here.”

Companies in focus

Jamie Chisholm contributed.