U.S. stocks edged higher to extend record run on Monday to begin a
holiday shortened week, as investors considered the interim Iran nuclear
deal as a boost it could give to global economic growth.The Nasdaq
Composite Index pierced through the psychologically important level of
4,000 points right after Monday's opening bell, a level not seen since
September 2000.Moreover, the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the
S&P 500 struck their new all-time intraday highs in the morning
trading session, after finishing at record highs on Friday.In midday
trading,vacuum bottle the
blue-chip Dow rose 30.60 points, or 0.19 percent, to 16,095.37. The
broader S&P 500 gained 1.54 points, or 0.09 percent, to 1,806.30.
The tech-heavy Nasdaq added 7.70 points, or 0.19 percent, to
3,999.35.The rally in the U.S. equity market just came on the heels of
broad gains in global stock markets on Monday, among which the German
benchmark stock indices also hit a record high following the
breakthrough nuclear deal reached between Iran and world powers at the
weekend.
Despite the record run on Wall Street, the bull market
is not over yet and current projections for future corporate earnings
put the fair market value at 18,000 points for the Dow, Jeremy Siegel,
professor of Finance at the Wharton School of the University of Lanyard StrapPennsylvania
told CNBC Monday.He predicted at the beginning of this year that the
Dow could top 16,000 points by year end which occurred last week.On the
economic front, U.S. pending home sales for October unexpectedly slipped
0.6 percent from the preceding month, according to the National
Association of Realtors.In corporate news, Wal-Mart Store Inc. shares
ticked up after the world's largest retailer announced that Doug
McMillon, a company veteran, was elected to succeed Mike Duke as
president and chief executive officer, effective in February.With the
holiday season set to kick start with "Black Thermal printer OEMFriday,"
the day after Thanksgiving and often regarded as the beginning of the
Christmas shopping season, investors will place more focus on retail
stocks.The U.S. stock market is slated to close on Thursday for
Thanksgiving Day, with trading volume expected thin this week.
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