Stocks, ETFs Gain in Light, Holiday-Shortened Trading
December 24th at 10:00am by Tom Lydon
Stocks and exchange traded funds are up in light, pre-holiday trading today. Since 1900, the Dow Industrial Average has been up 70% of the time on Christmas Eve.
Markets were buoyed this morning by a pair of positive economic reports. New orders for durable manufactured goods excluding transportation surged 2% in November and applications for jobless benefits fell last week, report Lucia Mutikani and Emily Kaiser for Reuters. Initial claims for state unemployment benefits fell by 28,000 to a seasonally-adjusted 452,000 last week, the lowest level since early September 2008.
In the early hours of this morning, the U.S. Senate voted 60-39 to pass a landmark health care bill. The health care bill would provide coverage to more 30 million Americans and begin a far-reaching overhaul of Medicare and the private insurance market, reports Shailagh Murray for The Washington Post . [For more stories on the healthcare sector, please see our health-care category.]
In the run-up to the vote, HMO stocks have been very strong in the past few months. The iShares Dow Jones U.S. Health Care Providers Index (NYSE: IHF) is up slightly today and is sitting just below its 52-week high. [For more stories on sector ETFs, please see our sector ETFs category.]
The Senate also voted today to raise the ceiling on government debt to $12.4 trillion, a big increase over the current limit. President Barack Obama has pledged to address this issue next year, reports the Associated Press.
Tony D’Altorio contributed to this article.

