U.S. stocks ended slightly higher Thursday, breaking a three-day losing streak.
The Dow Jones industrial average, the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq all rose modestly, as strong corporate earnings and a favorable jobless claims report lifted sentiment.
The Labor Department said jobless claims rose by 5,000 last week to 333,000, slightly lower than expected.
U.S. stocks have been under pressure this week, partly on fears of the U.S. Federal Reserve cutting back on its massive quantitative easing campaign, which has flooded the markets with liquidity.
Even with the modest declines this week, stocks are still up 18% to 23% this year.
“August historically has a slight bearish bias to it and volume is very low,” said Ryan Detrick, an analyst at Schaeffer’s Investment Research. “So far that is exactly what we’ve seen.”
Groupon surged after the daily deals site posted strong sales and announced a $300 million share-buyback program. The rally bumped Groupon’s market valuation to $7.3 billion, well above the benchmark $6 billion figure that Google reportedly offered for the company in 2011.
Tesla shares rallied after the electric-car maker reported a surprise quarterly profit. Tesla’s Model S also got the top crash test rating from the government and the stock was generating plenty of buzz among traders on StockTwits.
But Solar City, which is chaired by Tesla CEO Elon Musk, reported a wider loss than analysts had expected. The stock tumbled on the news. But one trader still expressed support for all things Elon Musk.
J.C. Penney was a top gainer in the S&P 500 following reports that the struggling retailer started to search for a new CEO to replace its interim head executive, Mike Ullman.
