Technology stocks stood tall in the first week of December trading, helping the S & P 500 and Nasdaq Composite finish Friday’s session at record closing highs. The tech-heavy Nasdaq lead the way with a 3.3% gain for the week. The S & P 500 closed nearly 1% higher. Both indexes are now riding three-week win streaks. The Dow Jones Industrial Average , meanwhile, pulled back last week. The 30-stock gauge was largely weighed down by shares of UnitedHealth Group, which came under pressure after the CEO of its insurance segment, Brian Thompson, was killed in a targeted attack in New York City . .IXIC .SPX 1M mountain The Nasdaq Composite versus the S & P 500 over the past month. The big economic release of the week arrived Friday in the form of the November nonfarm payrolls report . The U.S. economy added more jobs than economists had predicted — 227,000 versus the Dow Jones estimate of 214,000 — while the unemployment rate ticked up to 4.2%, as expected. Average hourly earnings were up 4% on a 12-month basis, a pinch above expectations. Economists and investors alike keep a close eye on that metric to help understand inflationary pressures in the economy. Odds of another quarter-point cut rate at the Federal Reserve’s mid-December policy meeting increased following Friday’s jobs data, according to the CME FedWatch tool . Earlier in the week, a look at private-sector job growth from payroll processor ADP came in a bit below forecasts, at 146,000 versus the 161,500 estimate. The week’s batch of non-jobs economic data was relatively mixed. On Monday, a better-than-expected November ISM manufacturing report still showed that the U.S. manufacturing sector contracted last month — but at a slower pace than what we saw in October, at least. The reading was 48.4 versus 47.5 expected. Anything below 50 indicates contraction. Meanwhile, the Commerce Department’s look at October factory orders on Wednesday was in line with expectations, up 0.2% compared with the prior month. That put an end to two-month streak of declines. Also on Wednesday, the November ISM services report — a look at activity in industries from health care to forestry to finance, among others — came in solidly below projections, at 52.1 versus 55.5 expected. Nevertheless, it pointed to continued expansion in a critical part of the U.S. economy. November marked the fifth consecutive month of services expansion in the ISM report. And now 51 out of 54 readings since June 2020 during the Covid-19 pandemic have been expansionary. Within the portfolio, Salesforce provided a very positive update after the close on Tuesday. The enterprise software giant reported solid earnings and offered upbeat commentary on its new artificial intelligence platform Agentforce , which sent shares jumping in Wednesday’s session. Salesforce finished the week as the second best Club stock, climbing 9.7%. The only better performer was Broadcom , which gained 10.8% thanks in large part to a 5.3% surge in…
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