The Dow Jones Industrial Average continues to trim its losses from last week’s sell-off, rising over 300 points Tuesday as of 11:00 a.m. ET with names like Morgan Stanley, Johnson & Johnson and UnitedHealth beating earnings expectations.

Today’s rise in the Dow follows as investors have been seeing nothing, but a sea of red lately with the index falling over 1,300 points last week. The markets could get an additional boost when Netflix reports its earnings later today.

“Our best assessment is that 3Q international net adds will be in line with management’s guidance of 4.4M, which is in line with our estimate,” said Deutsche Bank analyst Bryan Kraft, in a note. “However, based on investor feedback gathered by DB, the buyside’s expectations are a bit higher, in the high 4M range, at least partly due to a view that management has guided conservatively.”

Last week’s loss came just a couple of weeks after Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell praised the growth of the economy and not long after the S&P 500 reached historic highs, which signals that the extended bull run may finally be coming to a close. However, other analysts feel the markets were simply on course for a correction.

Treasury Yields Tick Higher on Jobs Data

U.S. Treasury notes ticked higher on Tuesday after the Labor Department revealed that the number of job openings in the United States reached a series high of 7.1 million in August.

“The report has been trending higher for a long time now, so I think the markets got immune to a lot of these prints, but I’d like to think the overall data is still fantastic, because the quit rate was higher in the low-wage categories such as leisure and hospitality,” said Thierry Wizman, global interest rates and currencies strategist at Macquarie Group.

Related: It’s A Huge Week for Leveraged Bank ETFs

Treasury yields, which have been on an upward trajectory as of late, ticked higher in addition to U.S. equities. The benchmark 10-year Treasury note and 30-year note resumed their upward trajectory–the 10-year yield went to 3.169, while the 30-year rose to 3.346.

Additionally, shorter duration bond yields also went higher with the three-month note ticking up to 2.31, the two-year to 2.87 and the five-year to 3.029.

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