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收盘:三大美股指齐新高,Facebook领跑龙头科技股

Close: the three major US stock indexes are at new highs, with Facebook Inc leading the leading technology stocks.

華爾街見聞 ·  Jul 24, 2021 05:58

In the United States, the initial PMI of the Markit service industry fell to a five-month low in July, but the manufacturing PMI reached a record high in July, and another batch of listed companies reported better than expected in the second quarter. The three major U. S. stock indexes continued to rise, hitting new highs. U. S. stocks fell sharply on Monday, with the Dow falling the most in nearly nine months, but continued to rally in the following days, ending the week with a cumulative gain.

Some of the stocks that reported quarterly results on Friday were volatile. Snap Inc, who surprised the market in the second quarter, jumped high and rose more than 20% at the beginning of the session. Twitter, which had the fastest year-on-year growth in revenue in 2014, rose more than 5% in intraday trading. Facebook Inc rose nearly 7% at one point, encouraged by the performance of Twitter and Snap Inc, and the shares of the three social media all hit record highs. American Express Co, who added new users of high-end credit cards to platinum cards in the second quarter, rose more than 5 per cent in intraday trading. Intel, where total revenue in the second quarter was higher than expected but data center revenue continued to decline, fell more than 6%. Although second-quarter earnings and revenues were higher than expected, Honeywell International Inc fell nearly 3 per cent at one point.

As US stocks climbed, US bond prices fell and yields rose, but 10-year US bond yields failed to hold steady at 1.30 per cent and continued to decline cumulatively throughout the week. The dollar index rose slightly, returning to 93.00 in the short term, approaching a more than three-month high and continuing to rise throughout the week. The cryptocurrency reversed its rally in recent days, with Bitcoin falling in intraday trading after approaching a record high of US $33000 in more than a week, while the cryptocurrency rose and fell differently throughout the week, with Taifang leading the rise, and the coin leading the decline.

Among commodities, crude oil continued to rise, reversing the week's decline after Monday's plunge, commenting that the new OPEC+ agreement to increase production is relatively a residual concern. Judging from US oil data, demand is still strong, and the market may still find it difficult for supply to keep up with demand, so the rise in oil prices continued until Friday. Yields on the dollar and Treasuries put upward pressure, with precious metals such as gold falling back and falling throughout the week; investors expected the ECB to extend monetary easing to help the economy recover and demand for metals, while most industrial metals, such as copper, continued to rise. but Len lead, which has been rising for days, fell to a three-year high and rose all week except Ren Zinc.

In the European market, auto parts maker Valeo performed better, Mercedes-Benz parent Daimler was upgraded, auto stocks led the pan-European stock index to a new high, and Dutch lithography giant chip stock ASML, which reported better-than-expected results earlier this week, also hit a record high. European stocks rose throughout the week. Anglo-German bond prices fell, prices remained tired throughout the week, and yields continued to fall cumulatively.

The three major US stock indexes are at new highs, Facebook Inc leads the leading technology stocks, Intel Corp leads the Dow component stocks, and the three general education stocks close down at least 50%.

Overall, the three major US stock indexes opened high, all hitting an all-time high in intraday trading. The S & P 500 rose more than 1 per cent above 4400 for the first time in midday history. The Dow Jones industrial average was up more than 260 points, or more than 0.7%, when it hit a record high at the end of the morning. The Nasdaq composite index was up more than 1 per cent at midday innovation highs.

In the end, the three major stock indexes closed higher for the fourth day in a row, and all earned new highs. The Dow closed up 238.20 points, or 0.68%, at 35061.55. The S & P 500 closed up 1.01% at 4411.79, closing above 4400 for the first time. The Nasdaq closed up 1.04% at 14836.99.

Small-cap stocks outperformed the market for two days in a row, while the Russell small-cap stock index, which is dominated by value stocks, fell in 2000 trading and closed up 0.46%. The technology-heavy Nasdaq 100 index closed up 1.31%, outperforming the market.

The three major stock indexes, which ended three weeks of gains last week, all rose, wiping out last week's losses: the Dow rose 1.08%; the S & P rose 1.96%, the biggest weekly gain since June 25; and the Nasdaq rose 2.84%. The biggest weekly gain since April 9. Russell 2000 rose 2.15%, ending three weeks of decline, while the Nasdaq rose 2.93%, resuming the rally after eight weeks of gains at the end of last week.

Among the Dow stocks, American Express Co rose more than 1% on Friday, Intel Corp fell more than 5%, and Honeywell International Inc fell more than 1%. Of the 11 sectors of the S & P 500, only energy, which fell more than 0.4 per cent on Friday, closed down, with the communications services sector, backed by Facebook Inc and Twitter, leading the way. Public utilities, essential consumer goods and health care rose by more than 1%, and information technology by nearly 1%. The smallest increase was in finance, which rose by more than 0.1%. Communications services rose more than 3 per cent this week, leading the rise, followed by information technology, which rose nearly 2.8 per cent, highlighting the strong performance of technology stocks this week, with only energy and utilities falling throughout the week.

Leading technology stocks fell just over 0.9%. Tesla, Inc. closed down. In FAANMG, Facebook Inc closed up more than 5%, the best performance. Alphabet Inc-CL C's parent company Alphabet rose more than 3%, Apple Inc rose more than 1%, Amazon.Com Inc rose 0.5%, Nai soared more than 0.7%, and did not rank at the bottom of the six major technology stocks for the first time in the last four days.

Most of the new energy car stocks fell, three Chinese stocks Li Auto Inc. fell 8 per cent, XPeng Inc. fell more than 5 per cent, NIO Inc. Motor fell more than 4 per cent, while Faraday closed up 6 per cent on the second day of listing.

Among the more volatile stocks that reported second-quarter results, Snap Inc closed up nearly 24 per cent and Twitter closed up more than 3 per cent.

Popular US-listed stocks fell generally, with ETF KWEB and CQQQ falling more than 8 per cent and 4 per cent respectively. Among the education stocks, TAL Education Group closed down more than 70%, Gaotu Techedu Inc. Education fell more than 60%, New Oriental Education & Technology Group fell more than 50%, NetEase, Inc youdao fell more than 40%, Education together fell nearly 40%, LAIX Inc. fell nearly 27%, Sunlands Technology Group fell more than 10%. In addition, DiDi Global Inc. fell by about 21%, POP CULTURE GROUP CO LTD, Zhihu Inc., E-cigarette first Yueke and Bilibili Inc. all fell by more than 10%, Pinduoduo by more than 7%, Tencent Music by nearly 7%, JD.com by more than 4%, Tencent's ADR by nearly 4%, Alibaba and Baidu by more than 3%.

In terms of European stocks, the pan-European stock index rose for four consecutive days, and the European Stoxx 600 index rose more than 1% on the second day of the week, closing above 461 points for the first time in history. Thirteen of the 19 sectors rose at least 1 per cent, with cars and spare parts up more than 2.5 per cent. Stock indexes all over the world rose. Among stocks, Daimler, which was upgraded to buy by agency Kepler Cheuvreux, rose more than 5 per cent. French auto parts maker Valeo, which recorded year-on-year growth in sales and earnings in the first half, rose nearly 6 per cent; ASML, whose target price was raised by brokerages after it reported higher-than-expected sales on Wednesday, closed at an all-time high.

Despite falling more than 2 per cent on Monday, the biggest drop in seven months, the Stoxx 600 index rose more than 1 per cent throughout the week. Stock indexes in all countries are also rising. Among the sectors, the biggest increase was in financial services, which rose by more than 4%, followed by tourism and leisure, which rose by more than 3%, while automotive, technology and retail also rose by more than 2%.

The yield on 10-year Treasuries failed to stabilize at 1.30%, falling for four weeks.

The yield on benchmark US 10-year Treasuries rose overall during the European and American trading session, with US stocks rising above 1.31 per cent at pre-session highs and up more than 3 basis points during the day. Us stocks were below 1.30 per cent for most of the time after opening and were about 1.28 per cent at the close of trading on Thursday. it's almost the same as it was at Thursday's close.

The yield on 10-year Treasuries fell 10 basis points on Monday, pushing 1.12% to a five-month low on Tuesday, but has continued to recover since then, recovering most of the decline, falling about 1 basis point for the whole week and falling for four consecutive weeks. it was the ninth week of falling yields in the last ten weeks.

European government bond prices were mixed on Friday, with Anglo-German bond prices falling and yields rebounding, while yields in marginal countries such as Italy continued to decline. The yield on UK benchmark 10-year government bonds rose 1.9 basis points to 0.584 per cent on the day, while German bunds rose 0.6 basis points to-0.20 per cent over the same period. British bond yields have fallen 4.2 basis points this week, while German bond yields have fallen 6.7 basis points for four consecutive weeks.

The dollar index rose above 93 in the short term and approached a three-month high, while Bitcoin fell in intraday trading after approaching $33000.

The ICE dollar index (DXY), which tracks a basket of the dollar's six major currencies, generally rose after the Asian market rose in early trading, only after a short-term decline in European stocks. Us stocks rose to 93.00 in early trading and rose more than 0.2% during the day, but quickly fell to 93.00, failing to approach the more than three-month intraday high set on Wednesday near 93.20.

By Friday's close, the dollar index was above 92.90 at 92.904, up nearly 0.1% on the day and 0.2% for the whole week, up for two weeks. The Bloomberg spot index continued to close roughly flat, rising for the third week in the last four weeks.

BTC rose above $32800 before midday trading in Asia and European stocks, with some platforms approaching $33000, an intraday high since July 14, up more than 3 per cent from intraday lows, and then gradually giving up all its gains and losses, with US stocks falling below $32000 at one point, nearing intraday lows, closing below $32300 and down about 0.4 per cent in the last 24 hours.

ETH, the second-largest cryptocurrency by market capitalization after Bitcoin, hit a two-day high of nearly $2100 at midday in Asia. It has also fallen since then, with US stocks falling below $2000 at midday, closing above $2000 and down more than 0.4 per cent in 24 hours.

The rising mainstream cryptocurrency fell on Friday, with BNB, the fourth largest cryptocurrency by market capitalization, down more than 3 per cent in the last 24 hours, Cardano (ADA), the fifth largest, XRP and DOGE, the sixth and eighth, and BCH and LTC, the 12th and 13th largest cryptocurrencies, down more than 2 per cent, according to CoinMarketCap.

The rise and fall of cryptocurrencies this week varies. ETH has risen nearly 5.4% in the last seven days, with the best performance among the top 10 cryptocurrencies, while BNB is down more than 7.4% and the worst; DOGE is up more than 5%, and DOGE is up more than 0.8%, while LTC is down more than 4.5%, and LTC is down 3.8%.

Crude oil rose four times in a row and hit an one-week high, rising throughout the week after Monday's plunge, while natural gas hit a two-and-a-half-year high and the biggest weekly increase in more than May.

International crude oil futures rose for four days in a row, although they plummeted on Monday, but finally reversed the decline throughout the week with a sustained rally.

Us WTI September crude oil futures closed up 0.22% at US $72.07 per barrel, while Brent September crude oil futures closed up 0.42% at US $74.10 per barrel, the second consecutive high for major contracts since Wednesday, July 14.

Us Oil and cloth Oil closed down 7.5% and 6.75% respectively on Monday, the biggest decline in 10 months and four months, respectively, but rose about 0.7% throughout the week, rebounding slightly from last week. Last week, American oil fell 3.7%, and cloth oil fell 2.6%, the biggest weekly decline in nearly four months and nearly two months, respectively.

Us gasoline and natural gas futures also rose for four days in a row. NYMEX August gasoline futures closed up 0.8% at $2.29 a gallon, up 1.7% this week, ending a two-week losing streak. NYMEX August natural gas futures closed 1.4% higher at $4.06 per million British thermal units, hitting a record high since December 2018 on the 5th, rising more than 10% for the week, the biggest weekly gain since February 5, and almost zero gains and losses last week.

Lun Copper four Lianyang for the first time in two weeks, 9500 US dollars, Lunxi rose for five consecutive weeks, gold hit a two-week low and ended four weeks of continuous gains.

London base metal futures rose on Friday except Len lead, which ended a three-day rally and fell off a three-year high. Lun copper rose for four days in a row, breaking through $9500 for the first time in two weeks. Zinc, aluminum, nickel and tin rose for two days in a row, with aluminum hitting a new high in more than a week and Lenny hitting a five-month high. Lunxi set an all-time high for two days in a row.

This week, all base metals except Lun Zinc have risen. Lunxi has risen for five consecutive weeks, rising nearly 2.7% in a week, continuing to lead the rise, breaking the $34000 mark for the first time on Thursday. Lenny rose for three weeks in a row. Lun lead rose for two weeks and more than 2% for the whole week, second only to Lunxi. Lun Aluminum ended a two-week losing streak. Lun copper rose more than 0.9 per cent, almost wiping out last week's decline. At the end of the week, zinc rose in a row and fell by more than 1% throughout the week.

New York gold futures resumed their decline, with COMEX August gold futures closing down 0.2% at $1801.80 an ounce, falling 0.7% this week and falling for the first time in the last five weeks, following Wednesday's lowest level since July 8.

New York silver and platinum futures rose in a row at the end of two days, silver futures closed down 0.6%, down 2.2% this week, down three weeks; platinum closed down 2.7%, down more than 4% this week, ending three weeks of gains. Palladium closed down 1.6% for five days, down nearly 1% this week, and fell for two weeks.

Among the four major commodities of gold, silver and copper oil, crude oil futures fluctuated the most this week, while from the final cumulative rise and fall, copper performed the best and silver the worst.

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