The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed above 34,000 for the first time on Thursday as the blue-chip benchmark and S&P 500 posted fresh record highs on a tech stock rally fuelled by falling bond yields and strong March United States retail sales data.

The 30-share index closed up 305.10 points or 0.9 percent at 34,035.99. The broader S&P 500 index – a proxy for the health of US retirement and college savings accounts – gained 1.11 percent to close at 4,170.45 while the Nasdaq Composite Index ended the trading day 1.31 percent higher.

It was the second time this week the S&P 500 has registered a new best close, and the Dow surpassed its previous closing peak on April 9.

Joining at a record high was the S&P information technology sector. Both it and the communication services index were buoyed by big tech names, including Apple Inc, Microsoft Corp and Facebook Inc.

“Even though valuations are pretty high, you’ve got a lot of confidence the big tech giants are going to continue to be able to deliver enough cash flow to justify those valuations,” said Tim Murray, a T. Rowe Price Associates capital markets strategist.

Helping draw in cash for such names is the fact Treasury yields, after spiking upwards at the end of March, have been in retreat as investors increasingly accept the Federal Reserve’s assurances on maintaining an accommodative monetary policy despite higher inflation.

The benchmark 10-year Treasury yield slipped below 1.6 percent for the first time since March 25.

Top US banks kicked off the first-quarter reporting season on Wednesday, with Goldman Sachs Group Inc, JPMorgan Chase & Co and Wells Fargo & Co posting bumper results.

Bank of America and Citigroup Inc also offered optimistic views on an economic recovery in their earnings reports on Thursday, but shares of both declined.

“Uncharacteristically, expectations for earnings have improved for the quarter and what tends to move markets is when the numbers are far better than expected,” said Randy Frederick, vice president of trading and derivatives for Charles Schwab.

BlackRock Inc, the world’s largest asset manager, advanced after reporting a 16 percent jump in first-quarter profit, while PepsiCo Inc edged higher after forecasting an increase in organic revenue growth in the second quarter.

Further bolstering sentiment, data showed retail sales jumped sharply in March as Americans received additional pandemic relief checks from the government, while jobless claims fell more than expected to 576,000 last week to a one-year low.

“For US equities, it’s the best of both worlds, as we have the 10-year down but we have good economic data. That’s exactly what you’d want to see,” said T Rowe’s Murray.

Cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase Global Inc bounced around before closing lower, a day after going public in a high-profile debut on the Nasdaq that briefly valued it at more than $100bn.

AppLovin Corp slumped on its first day of trading after its initial public offering valued the mobile app and gaming company at $28.6bn.

SOURCE: Aljazeera