Dow passes 21,000 as rate hike looms

(Bloomberg) -- The Dow surged 300 points to top 21,000 for the first time, the dollar advanced and Treasuries fell as investors grew increasingly confident global economic growth is accelerating, clearing the path for higher interest rates in the United States.

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Major lenders led gains among equities, with Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan Chase trading at all-time highs as the odds for a rate hike in two weeks swelled past 65% and President Donald Trump’s address to Congress did little to alter views that his administration will seek pro-growth policies. Industrial and energy shares also surged as the S&P 500 rallied the most since the day after the election. Technology and small-cap indexes ended at records.

The dollar rallied a day after two Federal Reserve officials said the case for lifting borrowing costs March 15 has strengthened. Robust factory data from China spurred gains in metal prices, while accelerating inflation in Germany added to European stock gains. The yield on 10-year Treasury notes topped 2.45%.

Trump reiterated broad proposals for boosting spending and cutting taxes without providing specifics that could be seen as impeding Congress’s path to enact the policies. That left investors focused on the Fed and the pace of economic growth. Data showed U.S. manufacturing expanded last month at the fastest pace in three years, while German inflation accelerated above 2% for the first time since 2012, adding to signs of momentum in Europe’s largest economy.

“Fed speakers trump Trump,” Richard McGuire, the head of rates strategy at Rabobank International in London, wrote in a note. Trump’s speech lacked “fresh content for the market to trade off, with big tax cuts, deregulation and an infrastructure plan being mentioned but not supported by any details. Given this, all focus instead turned to the slew of hawkish rhetoric from Fed speakers.”

What traders are looking at in the days ahead:

Fed speakers aren’t finished. There are other officials lined up for this week, including Chairwoman Janet Yellen, who will give an address on the economic outlook on Friday in Chicago.

Here are the main moves in markets:

Stocks
The S&P 500 jumped 1.4% to a record 2,395.88 at 4 p.m. in New York, its biggest gain of the year. The benchmark index briefly topped 2,400 for the first time after finishing February with its best monthly gain since March. Financial stocks surged 2.8%, the most since Nov. 10. The Dow rallied 302.63 points to 21,114.87, capping a 35-day run between thousand-point milestones that matches the fastest trip on record.

Bonds
Yields on 10-year Treasuries rose seven basis points to 2.46%, climbing for a third straight day to the highest level since Feb. 15.

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