Tuesday, December 24

S&P 500, Nasdaq close at records and extend postelection rally as Fed cuts rates

The S&P 500 and Nasdaq rose Thursday, extending Wall Street’s rally in the wake of President-elect Donald Trump’s victory, as traders weighed the latest rate cut from the Federal Reserve.

The

S&P 500

gained 0.74% to close at a record high of 5,973.10. The

Nasdaq Composite

advanced 1.51% to reach 19,269.46 — its first close above 19,000. The

Dow Jones Industrial Average

was little changed, ticking down less than one point to 43,729.34. All three indexes hit intraday record highs during the session.

The moves built on a

surge in stocks

Wednesday after Trump’s win, which included a 1,500-point gain for the

Dow

. The S&P 500 jumped 2.53% for its best post-election day in history.

The bond market has also been volatile since the election, with Treasury yields falling Thursday after spiking in the previous session.

Those big swings were the backdrop for the Federal Reserve’s

interest rate cut

Thursday afternoon. The central bank’s quarter-point cut was widely expected, but the move was smaller than September’s half-point reduction.

Fed Chair Jerome Powell said the central bank was “feeling good” about the state of the economy, and the Fed seems likely to stick to the small moves going forward.

“The balance of risks gives the Fed ample room to lower the Fed Funds rate well into 2025. Markets should not expect supersized rate cuts unless the economy turns south and [that] doesn’t look at all likely for a while,” said Jamie Cox, managing partner for Harris Financial Group.

Wall Street generally expects that the second Trump administration will be good for risk assets like stocks, thanks in part to his proposed tax cuts. However, the prospect of continued large government deficits and higher tariffs has raised some worries about a rebound in inflation.

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Until the extent and impact of Trump’s plans become clear, investors can expect volatile trading and a stock market that is moving generally higher, said Tony Roth, CIO at Wilmington Trust.

“At some point, given the stretched multiples on equities and the higher income levels of bonds, we could very much have a very compressed equity risk premium and little opportunity left in the equity market. We’re not there yet. I think that we’ve got six months before we have to have a serious conversation about being there,” Roth said.

Big Tech stocks moved higher on Thursday to bolster the market, with

Apple

and

Nvidia

gaining 2.1% and 2.3%, respectively.

Meta Platforms

rose 3.4%.

Financial stocks, which surged on Wednesday, gave back some of those gains on Thursday. Shares of

JPMorgan Chase

fell 4.3% and

American Express

dipped 2.8%, weighing on the Dow.

More from CNBC:

  • What Trump’s win could mean for student loan forgiveness

  • AppLovin, top tech stock of the year, soars another 45% on earnings beat

  • Steve Madden to slash China sourcing by as much as 45% as Trump’s tariff plan looms

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