The Dow Jones Industrial Average has closed at a new record after the Federal Reserve said the US economy was picking up following a winter slowdown.
The Dow yesterday advanced 45.47 points (0.27 per cent) to 16,580.84, notching its first all-time high of 2014. The last record close, 16,576.66, was set on December 31.
The S&P 500 rose 5.62 (0.30 per cent) to 1,883.95, while the tech-rich Nasdaq Composite Index added 11.01 (0.27 per cent) at 4,114.56.
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The central bank, as expected, continued a plan to gradually taper its bond-buying stimulus program, while maintaining ultra-low interest rates.
The Fed's positive outlook outshone a disappointing report from the Commerce Department, which said gross domestic product grew by a scant 0.1 per cent annual rate in the first quarter.
Sam Stovall, chief investment strategist at S&P Capital IQ, said sentiment has improved thanks to solid corporate earnings, better economic data and stock valuations that are reasonable.
But Stovall cautioned that weakness in the Nasdaq, if it persists, "could have a dampening effect."
Michael James, managing director of equity trading at Wedbush Securities, said the new Dow record shows investor money has been flowing from trendy tech stocks to "more stable, less sexy names" in heavy industry.
James said the continued weak performance of the Nasdaq diminishes the significance of the Dow record. "I don't think it matters that much," he said.
Twitter closed at a record low of USD 38.97 after the company disclosed that it had 255 million active monthly users in March, below the 257 million projected by Wall Street, according to BMO Capital Markets. Shares tumbled 8.6 per cent.
Investors also turned against online retail giant eBay, which reported a loss of USD 2.3 billion on a large tax charge and projected second-quarter profit of 67-69 cents per share, below the 70 cents expected. Shares dived 5.0 per cent.
But Time Warner got a lift after reporting earnings of USD 1.3 billion, 71 per cent above the year-ago level and better than analysts expected. Shares rose 2.7 per cent.
Bond prices rose. The yield on the 10-year US Treasury fell to 2.65 per cent from 2.70 per cent on Tuesday, while the 30-year slid to 3.46 per cent from 3.49 per cent. Bond prices and yields move inversely.