Dow Jones hits 25,000 for first time
- Published
US stock markets reached new highs on Thursday, as the blue chip Dow Jones Industrial Average crossed 25,000.
The gains extended an eye-popping run for Wall Street, which has surged over the last 12 months amid growth in the US and global economies.
On Thursday, markets got another boost after the ADP National Employment report estimated that employers added 250,000 jobs in December.
The US is due to release official job figures on Friday.
The Dow Jones already climbed about 25% last year, adding nearly 5,000 points and crossing the 24,000-mark at the end of November.
On Thursday, the Dow increased 152 points or 0.61% to 25,075, lifting the index for one of its fastest 1,000-point gains in history.
Greg McBride, chief financial analyst for Bankrate.com, said the gains were "no surprise".
"Dow 25,000 is a mere 4.2% up from 24,000 at the end of November," he said.
"With the positive fundamentals - an expanding economy, continued job growth, still low interest rates and tax reform that promises to boost corporate earnings - it's no surprise to see the market continuing to climb."
The S&P and Nasdaq have also hit milestones in recent days.
The tech-heavy Nasdaq closed above 7,000 in the first day of 2018 trading on Tuesday. On Thursday, the index closed up 12.38 points or 0.18% at 7,077.9.
The wider S&P 500, which topped 27,000 on Wednesday, climbed 10.9 points or 0.4% to 2,723.99 in morning trade on Thursday.
Analysts have predicted additional stock market gains in 2018, but expect them to be more limited than last year.
In 2017, prices were lifted by a rebound in economic growth and optimism that new corporate tax cuts would translate into bigger dividends and share buybacks.
Relatively low interest rates also made stocks an attractive investment.
On Thursday, financial companies were among the winners, while real estate stocks fell.
Analysis: Samira Hussain, New York business correspondent
In the past, the Dow passing a milestone like 25,000 points would elicit many cheers from traders on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. And of course, many, many baseball caps.
But that wasn't the case on Thursday. There was cheering but you'd be hard pressed to find someone wearing a hat or showing that kind of exuberance.
And that's because these milestones have stopped being news, given just how quickly we are crossing them. It was only in January 2017 the Dow crossed the 20,000 mark. In 2016, the only record the Dow broke was when it crossed 19,000 points in November.
What this milestone really shows is that the absolute tear that markets were on in 2017 is continuing in to 2018.
- Published30 December 2017
- Published29 December 2017