Small caps find green pastures on tech frenzy

Small caps edged higher Friday, underpinned on buying in the tech sector, benign economic data and by traders eager to put money back into stocks after a solid showing this week. Buying interest was curbed however, from those willing to book month-end profits and by lingering concerns about lofty energy and commodity prices. The Russell 2000 (NYSE:IWM) finished out the day up 2.73, or 0.37%, at 748.28.
For the month of May, the Russell rose 4.5%, climbing to the highest monthly close since December. Small caps trounced many of the large-cap index products this month. The Dow was actually down 1.4% in May, while the S&P 500 was up 1%.
The star performers today came from the tech arena, buoyed by impressive earnings from bellwether stock Dell Inc. (Nasdaq:DELL) and by chip designer Marvell Technology Group (Nasdaq:MRVL). The two stocks jumped 6.8% and 23.5%, respectively. The rise in tech stocks today bolstered investor psychology about consumer spending issues amid a difficult economy. Other big-name tech firms attracting buyers today included Cisco (Nasdaq:CSCO) and Hewlett-Packard (NYSE:HPQ). The Philadelphia Stock Exchange’s key index on semiconductor shares (CVE:SOX) jumped 2.3%.
Although tech generated much of the power for today’s move (the Nasdaq was up 0.6%, while the Dow was down 0.06% and the S&P 500 up 0.15%), the insurance business got a lift from American Insurance Group (NYSE:AIG), which gained 2.3% on an upgrade from analysts at Morgan Stanley.
Retailer and beverage shares weren’t joining the buying party however, with Costco (Nasdaq:COST) down 2.4%, Target (NYSE:TGT) down 0.4% and Pepsi (NYSE:PEP) off 0.5%. The S&P Retail Index was off about 0.5% for the day.
The market managed to dodge any potential data pitfalls today, as economic reports on income, inflation, manufacturing purchases and consumer sentiment all basically came in benign. Perhaps the biggest relief was on the inflation front, as today’s personal income report showed that the PCE deflator — considered the . . .
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