By

Alain Sherter /

MoneyWatch/ March 14, 2013, 4:06 PM

Stock surge continues as S&P 500 nears new high

Richard Drew/AP

(MoneyWatch) Stocks flirted with a new all-time high Thursday, as the S&P 500 closed just shy of its record.

The S&P 500 gained 9 points to close at 1,563.23, up 0.6 percent, just missing its previous high of 1,565 on Oct. 9, 2007. The Dow Jones industrial average has closed above its previous high, also reached on that same date more than five years ago, for eight straight days. It has risen for 10 days in a row, its longest winning streak since 1996. It added 84 points on the day to end at 14,539.

The Nasdaq closed at 3,259, up 14 points.

While the Dow follows the stocks of 30 "blue-chip" companies, as a much broader index the S&P 500 is regarded by many to be a better gauge of investor sentiment. It may not be done rising.

"Our expectation that the U.S. S&P 500 would climb as high as 1,550 by mid-year may now look too cautious," analysts with research firm Capital Economics wrote in a report. "After all, the index has already nudged above that level this month and is showing little sign of fatigue. Implied volatility is also at a six-year low, suggesting few envisage a major setback around the corner."

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Stocks were buoyed today by the Labor Department's latest jobless claims report, which showed that fewer Americans filed for unemployment benefits last week. Applications for aid fell to 332,000, while the four-week average shrank to 347,000, the lowest level since March 2008.

Other factors also have helped push stocks up in recent weeks. These include healthy personal consumption and retail sales; an ongoing rebound in the housing market; strong corporate earnings; falling oil prices; and expectations by investors that the Federal Reserve will continue to put downward pressure on interest rates well into 2014.

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Those trends have coincided with a period of relative calm in the eurozone, as European leaders meet this week in Brussels to discuss the region's economy and other matters. Fears that China, another engine of global economic growth, could suffer a sudden economic downturn also have abated. For now, that is keeping investors feeling bullish.

"Since the start of the year, institutional investors seem to have stopped reacting to headline risk as quickly and intensely as they did since the start of the bull market," said Ed Yardeni, president and chief investment strategist for institutional investor advisory Yardeni Research.

While stocks have continued their surge, experts caution that financial markets are an unreliable measure of the broader economy. Economists expect the U.S. economy to expand only modestly in 2013, with most estimates predicting growth of 1.5 percent to 2 percent. Those estimates are down from earlier forecasts this year, as the sequester -- mandated government spending cuts that took effect March 1 -- begins to slice into growth.

Stock gains also have only a limited impact on most consumers' purchasing power because most shares are concentrated in the hands of large investors and the wealthy. Although personal income rose sharply in the last quarter of 2012, most of that increase came from an acceleration in dividend payments and interest income.

© 2013 CBS Interactive Inc.. All Rights Reserved.
23 Comments Add a Comment
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ManOfSteel-Velvet says:
Bill Clinton is right: Economy does do better under Democrats. Historically since 1900, GDP, stock prices, corporate earnings, and private sector jobs have all increased under Democratic presidents than under Republicans.

Republicans claimed they are business friendly, but historical records from the Bureau of Labor Statistics or from U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis prove otherwise.

Republicans are detrimental to business and economy. Ex. Financial crisis of 2008.
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mamasrudeboy says:
...poor Mitt Robme ... crying that he should be given the CREDIT for the recovery of the economy... hmmmmmmm
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GhostF1ghter says:
Anybody notice the soul patch on the bald dude?

He's no stockbroker-- he's a blues musician!

Seize him!!
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ThomasSense says:
"most shares are concentrated in the hands of large investors and the wealthy"
Do they know something I don't know? Are the Republicans ready to negotiate instead of dictate? Will there be a compromise? Are they confident that the President will remain a centrist? I really got freaked out about all of the manufactured financial deadlines they kept making. It was like they were trying to put brakes on the economy.
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BobRooney3 says:
The President's worldview, any citizen of any country who wants to work hard and get ahead is as entitled to a job as an American, even if that citizen of another country has broken our laws to be here.
If you against any kind of Amnesty, go to this website and register.
Google this: NUMBERSUSA .Once you are registered, go to the "action board"
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Jaylah54200 says:
Gotta love the Obama haters here.

Unemployment up, market down? Obama's fault.

Unemployment down, market up? Obama's causing another crash.
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Aussie_convict replies:
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I just dont get it, I vote labour not liberal, one our best PM's was the Liberal John Howard, I personally disagreed with alot of his policies yet I cannot admit that he was bad for the country. I have never seen a craze like this "Obama hating" before with so little to back it up but prejudice. How in the twisted minds of the GOP can you explain that universal health care is a bad thing? Are they all really that selfish and greedy. And gun regulations - not bans - regulations. I own a gun here in Australia, there are however limits as to what those guns can be. Minimum barrel lenghts for pistols to hamper concealment, maximum magazine capacities lowered to prevent the ability of shooters from hitting more targets. And the really weird part is not one ounce of my freedom has been taken from me.
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Think4times says:
The higher you fly, the further you will fall.
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CreedenceLeonoreGielgud replies:
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So...stay on the ground. Snails are so much safer than eagles.
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andthetruthis says:
How about that....Republicans going "Doom and Gloom".

Geez.
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kbbpll says:
Why is a picture of that gray bald dude in every article about the DOW? (PS - sell! sell! sell! ...crash)
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beachshoe says:
What goes up must come down. 2008.
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and39 replies:
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continues to be bad news for conservatives. very sorry
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