It was a Super Tuesday for markets, too. Wall Street left the doldrums of the first two months of the year behind to kick off March with a blockbuster rally.
Traders had their pick of good news to fuel positive vibes throughout the day: the U.S. manufacturing sector showed signs of improvement, strength in car sales continued through February, and crude oil closed above $34 a barrel.
Gains piled upon gains to help benchmark indexes close at session highs. The S&P 500 and the Dow Jones Industrial Average both added 2.1%, and the Nasdaq gained 2.9%.
"While still negative, production activity appears to be markedly less negative at the moment -- hardly a robust assessment but better than a sharp stick in the eye," said Lindsey Piegza, chief economist at Stifel. "Still facing the perfect storm from a heightened U.S. dollar, ample inventory overhang and tepid global demand, producers are still cutting back production, albeit at a slower pace than when the [Federal Reserve] opted to raise rates for the first time in December."
Construction spending in January climbed 1.5%, an eight-year high and far better than estimated 0.4% growth. Spending increased a meager 0.1% in December.
Consumers continued to purchase a massive number of cars in February, even as overall confidence in the economy faltered. U.S. sales of lightweight vehicles totaled 17.4 million units last month. Ford (F - Get Report) reported a massive 20.4% surge in unit sales in the period, rocketing past estimates of 12% growth. Fiat Chrysler (FCAU) posted a 12% increase, its seventy-first month of sales growth.
General Motors (GM - Get Report) , however, missed February sales estimates by a wide margin. The Detroit automaker reported a 1.5% decrease to 227,825 vehicles. Consensus was for sales growth of 3% to 8%.
Crude oil bounced back to positive territory on Tuesday, reaching a two-month high. The commodity had a solid start to the week on high hopes of an agreement between Russia and members of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries over a production freeze. Saudi Arabia voiced its support for cooperation to stabilize prices on Monday. West Texas Intermediate crude closed 1.9% higher on Tuesday at $34.40 a barrel.
High-momentum tech names led Wall Street higher including industry giants Apple (AAPL - Get Report) , Amazon(AMZN - Get Report) , Alphabet (GOOGL) , Microsoft (MSFT) and Intel (INTC) . The Technology Select Sector SPDR ETF (XLK) added 2.7%.
By Keris Alison Lahiff
Source:http://www.thestreet.com/story/13478469/1/stocks-kick-off-march-with-massive-rally.html
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