US stock indexes rose on Thursday, with the S&P 500 (^GSPC) briefly crossing 5,500 for the first time ever as Nvidia (NVDA) continued a record-breaking surge that has catapulted it to the title of world’s most valuable public company.
The S&P 500 gained as much as 0.5% after the index secured its 31st record close of the year on Tuesday. The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) touched new highs before paring gains to hug the flatline. The Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) rose roughly 0.4%.
After a holiday break on Wednesday, Wall Street looked set to continue its winning ways in 2024. Stocks’ growth story this year has been largely driven by the excitement around AI’s potential, and no company has captured the collective attention like Nvidia. Its stock was up as much as 3% in early trading. Shares are up more than 170% so far this year.
On Tuesday, Nvidia completed a remarkably quick surge to usurp Microsoft (MSFT) as the most valuable company in the world — just two weeks after it dethroned Apple (AAPL) as the No. 2 most valuable company. Its rise to the top has come so fast, Yahoo Finance’s Jared Blikre wrote, that some more passive investors haven’t been able to keep up.
Elsewhere on Thursday, global central banks were in focus as the Swiss National Bank cut rates for the second time this year. The Bank of England kept its benchmark rate at a 16-year high, but signals pointed to a rate cut in the summer.
In the US, meanwhile, most traders continue to bet on a Fed cut by September, according to the CME FedWatch tool. The biggest piece of economic data came in the form of weekly jobless claims, which showed a dip of 5,000 to 238,000 last week versus a consensus expectation of 235,000.
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