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Stocks rally on Wall Street as bank fears ease further

A person walks near a building with three U.S. flags flying in front.
Big actions by regulators recently have calmed some of the worries around banks, including a government-brokered takeover by one Swiss banking giant of another. Above, the New York Stock Exchange.
(Mary Altaffer / Associated Press)
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Stocks rallied on Wednesday as Wall Street shook off more of the fear that dominated it earlier this month.

The Standard & Poor’s 500 index rose 1.4% for its fourth gain in the last five days. The Dow Jones industrial average climbed 1%, while the Nasdaq composite jumped 1.8%.

They followed similar gains in other markets around the world and put the S&P 500 on track to close a tumultuous month with a modest gain. That’s despite the month being dominated by worries about banks and whether the industry is cracking under the pressure of much higher interest rates.

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Forceful actions by regulators recently have calmed some of the worries around banks. By Wednesday, a measure of fear among stock investors on Wall Street fell to nearly where it was March 8. That was the day before Silicon Valley Bank’s customers suddenly yanked out $42 billion in a panicked dash. It became the second-largest U.S. bank failure in history and sparked harsher scrutiny of banks around the world.

“I think the market has been very much focused on a set of extremes, like what we saw in the COVID period, where it was either the sky is falling or everything is euphoric,” said Zach Hill, head of portfolio management at Horizon Investments.

Although he doesn’t think fears about banks are completely gone, he says now “we’re in much more of a middle-ground environment, in terms of the economy and in terms of rate hikes flowing through to economic activity.”

Among the big actions taken by regulators was a government-brokered takeover by one Swiss banking giant of another. In that deal, UBS said Wednesday that it’s bringing back former Chief Executive Sergio Ermotti to help it absorb its troubled rival Credit Suisse. Ermotti led the bank through its turnaround after the 2008 financial crisis.

UBS stock in Switzerland rose 3.7%. Other big banks across the continent also strengthened, which helped indexes there to rise 1% or more.

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On Wall Street, nearly all of the financial stocks in the S&P 500 rose, and some of the banks that have been hit hardest in recent weeks rose sharply. First Republic Bank jumped 5.6%, and PacWest Bancorp gained 5.1%.

The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. announced the sale of much of Silicon Valley Bank’s assets at the start of this week. Regulators this month also announced programs to help banks raise cash more easily.

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That, plus the implicit promise that U.S. officials have seemed to make about protecting depositors at other banks, should help support the industry, analysts say.

Regulators are still working to stabilize the banking sector after the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank.

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Easing fears about the banking system have helped Treasury yields rise in the bond market after some historic-sized moves this month.

The two-year yield, which tends to move more on expectations for the Federal Reserve and has been particularly unsettled, ticked up to 4.09% from 4.08% late Tuesday. Earlier this month, it went from more than 5% to less than 3.80%, which is a massive move.

The path ahead for the Fed and other central banks has become much more difficult because of the banking industry’s struggles. Typically, the still-high inflation seen around the world would call for even higher interest rates. But that would risk more pressure on banks, which could pull back on lending and squeeze the economy.

Traders are largely betting the Fed will have to cut rates as soon as this summer, something that can act like steroids for markets. That’s helped Big Tech and other high-growth stocks in particular, which are seen as some of the biggest beneficiaries of lower rates.

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It’s also why a quick glance at the index that gets the most attention on Wall Street could be deceiving, Hill said.

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“Looking just at the S&P 500, you could potentially draw wrong conclusions from that,” he said. “The rotations beneath the surface, we think it makes some sense.”

Gains for Big Tech stocks, which dominate the top of the S&P 500, have helped buoy that index. But smaller stocks are still down sharply for the month, as are financial stocks.

The Fed has hinted that it sees one more hike before holding rates steady through this year. Many professionals on Wall Street take the Fed at its word, saying rate cuts would probably come more quickly only if the economy falls into a deep recession.

For now, a resilient job market has been holding up the economy, even as portions of it weaken under higher interest rates. Most of Wall Street will soon begin reporting profits in the first three months of the year under such conditions.

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Micron Technology rose 7.2% even though it reported a bigger loss and weaker revenue than expected. Analysts said that they were expecting a rough quarter, and they see some signs of optimism on the horizon as bloated inventories in the industry appear to be coming down.

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All told, the S&P 500 rose 56.54 points to 4,027.81. The Dow rose 323.35 points to 32,717.60, and the Nasdaq added 210.16 points to 11,926.24.

AP writers Joe McDonald and Matt Ott contributed to this report.

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