Dow jumps over 400 points — on pace for 4th straight day of gains as Santa visits NYSE

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Wall Street’s main indexes rose for a fourth consecutive session on Wednesday, as investors parsed fresh economic data and doubled down on bets the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates in December.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average surged 416 points, or 0.9%, to 47,528. The Nasdaq gained more than 200 points, or 0.9%, and the S&P 500 gained 0.9%.

Tech stocks were in the lead following AI-server maker Dell’s strong forecasts, helping the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq touch two-week highs.


The Dow rose more than 300 points on Wednesday, nearing a two-week high. Santa Claus and elves visited the New York Stock Exchange on Wednesday ahead of the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day parade. Getty Images

Investors were also digesting mixed economic data after jobless claims fell last week, while new orders for capital goods surged in September.

New claims for US jobless benefits fell to 216,000 in the week ended Nov. 22, below expectations of 225,000, according to Labor Department data.

“The economy isn’t slipping into recession, but it’s weak enough to allow the Fed another cut. There’s still a high amount of people that are on unemployment, so this gives the Fed headroom to be able to cut some more,” Kim Forrest, chief investment officer at Bokeh Capital Partners said.

On the back of softer consumer demand signals and dovish remarks from key Fed officials, traders are now pricing in an 84.9% chance of a 25-basis-point rate cut next month – nearly double last week’s odds, CME’s FedWatch tool showed.

Investors were also weighing a report suggesting White House economic adviser Kevin Hassett was a frontrunner to be the next Fed Chair, at a time when political influence in monetary policymaking has been a concern.

Wall Street’s recent recovery from a tech-led selloff earlier this month has trimmed monthly losses on the main indexes. It would still be their biggest monthly losses since the US tariff rout earlier this year.

Lifting some of the gloom on Wednesday was a 2.3% rise in Dell after its quarterly forecasts surpassed expectations, supported by strong demand for its servers in AI data centers.


Santa Claus signs the guest book at the NYSE on Wednesday. This weekend will be pivotal for big-box retailers. Getty Images

Traders were also bracing for the busy holiday shopping period – Thanksgiving on Thursday, followed by Black Friday and Cyber Monday – a stretch when trading volumes typically thin out and price swings could sharpen.

The period will be pivotal for big-box retailers as they court shoppers squeezed by tariff-driven price increases and a wave of corporate layoffs.

Results and forecasts from retailers such as Walmart and Target have been mixed even as the National Retail Federation expects this year’s holiday sales to top $1 trillion for the first time.

Among other stocks, HP fell 2.3% after the personal computer maker unveiled dour profit forecasts and announced job cut plans.