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Nasdaq composite ticks higher to a record after a quiet day on Wall Street

The New York Stock Exchange
The Nasdaq composite rose 0.7% on Monday to an all-time high of 16,794.87.
(Peter Morgan / Associated Press)
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Most U.S. stock indexes edged higher after a quiet day of mixed trading Monday following their latest winning week.

The Standard & Poor’s 500 rose 4.86 points, or 0.1%, to 5,308.13 to pull within 0.02 of its record set last week. The Nasdaq composite gained 108.91 points, or 0.7%, to 16,794.87 to set its own all-time high.

The Dow Jones industrial average was the laggard. It slipped 196.82 points, or 0.5%, to 39,806.77 in its first trading after closing above the 40,000 level for the first time Friday.

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Norwegian Cruise Line helped lead the market by steaming 7.6% higher after giving financial forecasts for the year that topped analysts’ expectations. It said demand is growing for cruises, and some of its competitors gained in its wake. Carnival rose 7.3%, and Royal Caribbean gained 4.1%.

All three of the big U.S. stock indexes set records last week in large part because of revived hopes that the Federal Reserve will be able to cut interest rates this year as inflation hopefully cools. More reports showing big U.S. companies are earning fatter profits than expected also boosted stock prices.

This week has few top-tier economic reports, like last week’s headliner that showed inflation may finally be heading back in the right direction after a discouraging start to the year. But some potentially market-moving reports on corporate profits are on the calendar.

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Atop them all is Nvidia, whose rocket ride amid a frenzy around artificial-intelligence technology has been a major reason for the S&P 500’s gains over the last year. It will report its latest quarterly results Wednesday, and expectations are high. Analysts are forecasting its revenue more than tripled to $24.59 billion from a year earlier.

Its stock climbed 2.5% to bring its gain for the year so far to 91.4%.

Several retailers are also on the schedule, including Lowe’s on Tuesday, Target on Wednesday and Ross Stores on Thursday. They could offer more details on how well spending by U.S. households is holding up. Pressure has been rising on them amid still-high inflation, even if it’s not as bad as before, and cracks seem to be most visible among the lowest-income customers.

Target sank 2.1% after it said Monday it would cut prices on thousands of everyday essentials, such as milk and diapers, in an acknowledgment of how customers are looking for relief from higher prices.

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In the oil market, crude prices eased modestly. They erased earlier gains from overnight trading after the death of Iran’s president in a helicopter crash.

In the bond market, yields ticked a bit higher. The yield on the 10-year Treasury rose to 4.44% from 4.42% late Friday. The two-year yield, which more closely tracks expectations for Fed action, ticked up to 4.84% from 4.83%.

The Federal Reserve on Wednesday will release the minutes from its latest meeting, where it again held its main interest rate at the highest level in more than two decades. The hope is that the Fed can manage the delicate balancing act of grinding down the economy through high interest rates by just enough to get inflation under control but not so much that it causes a painful recession.

Traders are putting an 88% probability on the Fed cutting its main interest rate at least once this year, according to data from CME Group.

“The better reading for April is encouraging,” Fed Vice Chair Philip Jefferson said about the most recent inflation data in a speech Monday before the Mortgage Bankers Assn. But he also said inflation has been declining “nowhere near as quickly as I would have liked.”

In stock markets abroad, indexes were modestly higher across much of Asia and Europe.

Choe writes for the Associated Press.

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