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U.S. stocks briefly surpass pre-virus all-time closing high

Gold and silver

Gold and silver rebounded and treasury yields dropped from the highs of the day

U.S. stocks briefly surpassed the all-time closing high reached before the coronavirus pandemic, propelled by surging technology shares. The dollar weakened and Treasury yields rose to five-week highs.

The S&P 500 climbed 1.4%, momentarily topping the 3,386.15 level reached on Feb. 19, and capping the more than 50% rally since the market lows in March. Ten of the benchmark index’s 11 industry sectors rose Wednesday, led by technology, health care and consumer discretionary shares. The Nasdaq Composite outperformed the S&P as Apple Inc., Microsoft Corp. and Tesla Inc. jumped. In Europe, the Stoxx Europe 600 Index rose for a fourth day.

The main force that’s been driving markets the last few weeks has really been momentum, said Kevin Caron, portfolio manager for Washington Crossing. We’ve got a market that’s focused on the good case outcome for the virus, we’ve got a market that has taken a great deal of comfort in that fiscal policy is going to be there to support an economy through tough times.

Treasury yields dropped from the highs of the day after the government’s sale of $38 billion in 10-year notes attracted stronger-than-forecast demand.

Silver joined gold in rebounding, as investors decided the flight from precious metals driven by advancing bond yields had gone too far.

It was just a matter of time. Once we hit 3,300, I think everybody knew we’d get to the new record before long, said Matt Maley, chief market strategist at Miller Tabak + Co. The question is whether we’ll rally further now that we’ve got it. I think we’ll take a breather now that we’ve reached the new high, which would actually be quite healthy.

After setting a new peak on Friday above $2,070 an ounce, bullion had since tumbled as much as 10%. Crude futures posted a five-month high in New York trading after an industry report pointed to a third straight weekly drop in American crude stockpiles.

Elsewhere, Europe’s corporate bond spreads narrowed to their tightest since early March, just a few basis points off pre-virus levels, according to a Bloomberg Barclays index.

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