The Dow and S&P 500 rose on Friday, a day after the major indexes fell amid concerns of a slowdown in global economic growth.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose about 200 points, or 0.7%. The S&P 500 bounced by 0.55%. The technology-heavy Nasdaq Composite poped slightly.
Theyield on the 10-year Treasuryrebounded 5 basis points to 1.34%, easing concerns about an economic slowdown (1 basis point is 0.01%). Falling yields have mystified investors lately, with the 10-year yield falling to 1.25% at its low on Thursday.
The stocks that led the losses on Thursday led the gains in premarket trading Friday. Bank of America jumped nearly 2% in early trading, leading a bounce in financial shares. Royal Caribbean and Carnival each popped more than 2%. American Airlines and United Airlines gained more than 1%.
Shares of GM gained 2% after Wedbushsaid the stockis a buy and could jump more than 50% as investors realize the extent of its tech and electric vehicle evolution.
Big Tech stocks were a bit weak in premarket trading as President Biden was set to announce a new executive order aimedat the competitive practices by the sector's giants. Amazon was down about 0.3% after hitting a new all-time high on Thursday.
Thursday's losses came as the proliferation of the highly infectious delta Covid variant also fueled worries about the global economic comeback. The Olympicsannounced a ban of spectatorsat Tokyo's summer games as Japan declared a state of emergency to curb the spread of coronavirus.
"Our central case has been for a choppy July" with the S&P 500 falling as low as 4,100, wrote Tom Lee, Fundstrat's head of research, in a note to clients Thursday night. "While this is a possibility, we think there is a chance [Thursday] marked the peak of [the] 'growth scare' and if this is correct, equities might be shifting towards a broader risk on."
The Dow closed Thursday's regular session lower by nearly 260 points. The S&P 500 dipped 0.86%, while the Nasdaq broke a four-day win streak by falling 0.72%.
For the week, the Dow is down 1.1%, the S&P 500 is off by 0.7% and the Nasdaq Composite has shed 0.5%.
"The market is solidly mid-cycle and with that typically comes a 10-15% index level correction. We expect such a correction will create buying opportunities given a still strong growth backdrop," Mike Wilson, Morgan Stanley's chief U.S. equity strategist, told clients. Wilson favors financials, healthcare and materials.
"Our economic growth forecasts remain positive, but bigger bulls continue to talk about 'pent up demand'," Wilson added. "We agree there is pent up demand for services consumption. We also think the degree of overconsumption in goods and the ensuing payback is under-appreciated as the positive effects on income from stimulus checks and the surge in asset prices fade."
The latest jobless claims report released Thursday also indicated a potential slowdown in the labor sector as first-time applicants for unemployment benefits unexpectedly jumped to 373,000 in the week ending July 3. Economists were looking to see 350,000 initial claims, according to Dow Jones.