- US
stocks edged higher on Thursday after jobless claims for the week ended May 16 reached 2.4 million. - The Labor Department's latest data brings the metric's nine-week total to nearly 39 million. Unemployment filings have now topped the 37 million claims made during the 18-month-long financial crisis.
- The oil rally pushed onward, with West Texas Intermediate crude rising as much as 3.5%, to $34.66 per barrel.
- Watch major indexes update live here.
US equities edged higher on Thursday after jobless claims for the week ended May 16 totaled 2.4 million.
The latest data pushes the figure's nine-week total to nearly 39 million, surpassing the 37 million Americans who filed for unemployment insurance during the 18-month-long Great Recession.
The Labor Department's Thursday release matched economists' median estimate of 2.4 million claims and marked the seventh-straight decline for weekly filings.
Here's where US indexes stood shortly after the 9:30 a.m. ET market open on Thursday:
- S&P 500: 2,974.28, up 0.1%
- Dow Jones industrial average: 24,617.88, up 0.2% (42 points)
- Nasdaq composite: 9,391.67, up 0.2%
Stock futures were initially pushed lower after the Senate passed a bill aiming to delist Chinese companies from American exchanges. Lawmakers and the White House have repeatedly raised concerns around US-listed firms that may be under Chinese government control or receiving capital from state funds.
Facebook and Amazon leaped higher in early trading after breaching record highs in Wednesday's session. The companies have thrived amid coronavirus-fueled volatility as traders park cash in mega-cap tech stocks. Such inflows contributed to the Nasdaq composite's outperformance against peer indexes.
The week's oil-price rally surged onward, with West Texas Intermediate crude leaping as much as 3.5%, to $34.66 per barrel. Brent crude, oil's international benchmark, gained 3.4%, to $36.98, at intraday highs.
The tepid Thursday session follows a rally in Wednesday trading. The Dow rose 369 points as investors grew more optimistic around economic reopening progress. All 11 sectors of the
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