[BRIEFING.COM] The stock market opened on a strong note, lifting the S&P 500 (+0.1%) and Nasdaq Composite (+0.4%) to fresh intraday record highs. With little news to drive action amid the ongoing government shutdown, the market moved sideways for most of the day, but some late afternoon buying interest helped the major averages notch record closing highs as well.
The DJIA (+0.2%) notched a record closing high, though it failed to surpass its all-time high level from last Tuesday. Meanwhile, the small-cap Russell 2000 (+0.7%) outperformed, and the S&P Mid Cap 400 (+0.1%) captured a modest gain after spending most of the day in negative territory.
Only four S&P 500 sectors finished in positive territory, though a healthy gain in the top-weighted information technology sector (+0.5%) masked broader losses and contributed to the Nasdaq Composite's outperformance.
Chipmakers fueled much of the move, propelling the PHLX Semiconductor Index (+1.9%) to another record high, while Fair Isaac (FICO 1784.68, +271.97, +17.98%) topped the S&P 500 leaderboard after unveiling a direct license program that allows tri-merge resellers to calculate and distribute FICO Scores directly to clients.
The materials (+1.1%), communication services (+0.3%), and industrials (+0.2%) sectors also finished with gains.
The energy sector (-1.0%) widened its week-to-date loss to 4.0% (the worst among the eleven S&P 500 sectors), as crude oil futures settled today's session $1.31 lower (-2.1%) at $60.48 per barrel. Occidental Petro (OXY 44.23, -3.49, -7.31%) moved lower after news that Berkshire Hathaway Inc. (BRK-B 495.96, -2.24, -0.45%) entered into an all-cash agreement to acquire the company's chemical unit, OxyChem, for $9.7 billion.
Tesla (TSLA 435.97, -23.49, -5.11%) also moved lower today after reporting over 497,000 vehicles delivered in Q3. The headline figure was record-setting, but it was largely pulled forward by the expiration of the $7,500 EV tax credit, raising questions around Q4 demand. The consumer discretionary sector retreated 0.7% in response despite broader strength throughout its other components.
On the macro front, Senate Majority Leader Thune said that it is unlikely that the Senate will have enough votes over the weekend to reopen the government, meaning the shutdown is on course to continue into next week. The shutdown has done little to keep the major averages from pushing further into record territory so far, though the blackout of key economic data today certainly added to the lethargy of today's action.
Nonetheless, the data that the market did receive before the nearly cemented odds of another rate cut later this month, keeping the market trending higher as earnings season approaches.
U.S. Treasuries finished Thursday with modest gains, pressuring yields on 5s, 10s, and 30s to their lowest closing levels in two weeks. The 2-year note yield settled up one basis point to 3.55%, and the 10-year note yield settled down two basis points to 4.09%.