Nasdaq hits highest point for a month

Technology stocks climbed, driving the Nasdaq up to its highest close in a month, as solid corporate results lured investors …

Technology stocks climbed, driving the Nasdaq up to its highest close in a month, as solid corporate results lured investors back into high-tech powerhouses and tame US inflation data fostered hopes of more interest-rate cuts.

After the close of regular trading, IBM, the world's No. 1 computer maker, posted results that beat Wall Street's expectations while Apple Computers reported its first loss in three years, but those results beat previously lowered expectations.

IBM shares jumped to $104 on the Instinet electronic brokerage system from their regular close of $96-11/16, up $3-15/16 on the day, on the New York Stock Exchange. Apple's stock also surged to $17-3/4 from its Nasdaq close of $16-13/16. During regular trading, Apple had slipped 5/16.

During Wednesday's regular session, blue chips fell as investors swiveled out of old-economy stalwarts, including drug stocks, and into higher-growth tech shares on hopes the economy will rebound if the U.S. Federal Reserve ratchets down interest rates some more in 2001.

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"The Nasdaq is doing extremely well with some good earnings reports out after the closing bell last night," said Mr Peter Coolidge, managing director of equity trading at Brean Murray & Co. "We did not get the unexpected and the tech market breathed a sigh of relief from that."

The Nasdaq Composite Index rose 64.23 points, or 2.45 per cent, to 2,682.78. Computer networking company Juniper Networks helped boost the tech-packed measure, leaping $8-3/16 to $136-3/16 after beating earnings estimates and raising its full-year forecast late Tuesday.

The Dow Jones industrial average lost 68.32 points, or 0.64 per cent, to close at 10,584.34. Minnesota Manufacturing & Mining Co., better known as 3M, lost $3-1/2 to $110 and pressured the blue-chip gauge after blaming the slowdown in U.S. economic growth and the strong dollar for the shortfall in its quarterly results.

But the Dow got a lift from two of its biggest tech components, IBM and Hewlett-Packard Co. Computer and printer maker H-P gained $1-1/4 to $31-5/8.

The Nasdaq has risen 11 percent so far in 2001, after a harrowing drop of nearly 40 percent last year. The Dow has dipped 1.2 percent so far this year, compared with a 6.2 percent drop in 1999.

Reuters