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Dow jumps more than 200 points, rebounding for a second day after Monday’s drop

U.S. stocks are higher on Wednesday as equities continue their rebound from a one-day rout to start the week.

Better-than-expected earnings reports from Dow members Coca-Cola and Johnson & Johnson added to the bullish sentiment.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose by 265 points, or 0.7%, and is hovering less than 1% away from a record. The S&P 500 gained 0.5%. The Nasdaq Composite climbed 0.3%, even though shares of Netflix declined on a disappointing subscriber forecast.

The 30-stock index rallied nearly 550 points on Tuesday. The back-to-back rallies completely wiped out the Dow’s massive loss at the start of the week. The Dow tumbled by 725 points on Monday for its worst session in eight months.

“Tuesday was a textbook oversold bounce following Monday’s collapse,” Thomas Essaye of Sevens Report Research said in a report Wednesday. “Beyond short-term gyrations, however, for value and cyclicals to reassert leadership, we will need to see yields bottom and economic growth beat estimates (two things we think will happen).”

The bond market, specifically the 10-year Treasury yield, is driving the volatility in the equity markets. On Wednesday, the 10-year yield was bouncing, up 7 basis points to 1.287% (1 basis point equals 0.01%). The yield dropped to a new 5-month low on Monday, before stabilizing on Tuesday. The drop in rates unnerved equity investors by signaling a possible slowing economy due to spreading Covid variants or a possible Federal Reserve mistake.

Stocks that would benefit most from a continued swift economic reopening are climbing on Wednesday after rebounding from the Monday sell-off in the prior session. Shares of Carnival were up more than 8%. Las Vegas Sands was up 2%.

Energy stocks were higher as oil continued to rebound after falling below $70 a barrel on Monday. The Energy Select SPDR is up over 3%.

Dow member Coca-Cola gave a boost to market sentiment after reporting quarterly revenue that topped pre-pandemic 2019 levels and raising its full-year forecast. Coca-Cola shares gained more than 1%.

Fellow Dow member Johnson & Johnson’s stock is trading nearly flat even after the drugmaker reported better than expected second-quarter earnings and revenue and also raised its 2021 guidance.

Moderna joined the S&P 500, giving the stock a 20% boost from when the addition was announced a week ago. Its shares are trading 3% higher.

Verizon shares are up more than 1% in after reporting better-than-expected revenue and subscriber growth and raising its full-year outlook.

Shares of Chipotle rose more than 10% as the Mexican fast-food chain reported quarterly revenue that surpassed pre-pandemic levels as dine-in customers returned to its restaurants.

Netflix reported disappointing third quarter subscriber guidance after the bell on Tuesday. The streaming giant said it expects 3.5 million net subscribers in the third quarter, nearly 2 million below analysts’ estimates. The company also reported earnings that missed expectations.

Netflix shares were last down almost 4%.

About 85% of S&P 500 companies that have reported so far have beaten estimates, according to FactSet.

On Tuesday, reopening stocks rebounded sharply from Monday’s sell-off triggered by a Covid-inspired global growth scare. American Airlines rose 3% and Norwegian Cruise Line rose 8%.

Some strategists see the market heading into a volatile period, in which there could be a deeper pullback. Investors are juggling concerns about inflation as well as new Covid cases rebounding in the U.S. as the delta variant spreads.

“I think what we’ve seen here are the early warning shots of a correction that we’ll see probably… in late August, September, October,” said Matt Maley, equity strategist at Miller Tabak. 

However, data shows spikes in Covid case counts typically don’t keep the stock market down for long. In the 14 months since the April peak in average daily cases last year, U.S. case counts have flared up four times during which the S&P 500 stayed positive.

“We should expect the continuation of whip saw behavior from investors,” Rich Steinberg, chief market strategist at The Colony Group, told CNBC Wednesday. “We will get a follow on rally as investors have been conditioned to buy the dip. They have also been negatively conditioned to worry about the economy and the virus from last year’s stressful world. I would describe the environment as skittish, but we are not seeing high levels of short-termism.”

— with reporting from CNBC’s Patti Domm and Michael Bloom

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