US stocks have closed higher regaining some of their momentum thanks to a rebound by technology stocks while volatility dropped to record lows ahead of an eventful economic and policy calendar next week.
The CBOE Volatility index, also known as Wall Street’s fear gauge, dropped to a fresh post-pandemic record low.
“What you are really seeing in the vol market is an unwillingness to engage,” said David Bianco, Americas chief investment officer for asset manager DWS Group.
“You’ve just got paralysis in investors.”
Investors were sitting on the sidelines ahead of inflation data and a Federal Reserve policy meeting next week.
Traders have priced in a 73 per cent chance of the US central bank holding interest rates at the current 5.0 per cent-5.25 per cent range during its monetary policy meeting on June 13-14, according to CMEGroup’s Fedwatch tool.
However, they anticipate a 50 per cent chance of a rate hike in July.
The two-year Treasury yield, which tends to move in step with short-term rate expectations, slipped from one-week highs to 4.51 per cent after a sharp jump in weekly jobless claims signalled a softening labour market.
The US Labor Department is due to release inflation data on June 13, the first day of the Fed meeting.
The numbers are expected to show consumer prices cooled slightly in May but core prices remained sticky.
Meanwhile, a rebound by technology and megacap stocks helped major indexes regain their footing amid thin volumes.
Heavyweight Amazon.com Inc gained 2.49 per cent as Wells Fargo initiated coverage on the company with an “overweight” rating while Nvidia Corp, Apple Inc and Tesla Inc rose between 1.55 per cent and 4.58 per cent.
GameStop Corp tanked 17.89 per cent as billionaire investor Ryan Cohen took over as executive chairman after the video-game retailer ousted its CEO and posted a bigger-than-expected quarterly loss.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 168.59 points, or 0.50 per cent, to 33,833.61, the S&P 500 gained 26.41 points, or 0.62 per cent, to 4,293.93 and the Nasdaq Composite added 133.63 points, or 1.02 per cent, to 13,238.52.
Among the 11 major S&P sectors, consumer discretionary led the charge while real estate and energy indexes slipped, with the latter being hit by a drop in oil prices.
Adobe jumped 4.95 per cent after Piper Sandler raised its prices target on the stock to $US500.
The Photoshop software maker said it was offering its AI tool Firefly to large businesses.
Lucid Group tumbled 1.88 per cent after the US luxury electric-vehicle maker’s head of China operations, Zhu Jiang, said the company was preparing to enter the world’s largest car market.
Advancing issues outnumbered declining ones on the NYSE by a 1.16-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 1.02-to-1 ratio favoured advancers.
The S&P 500 posted 12 new 52-week highs and two new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 71 new highs and 43 new lows.