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News Story
Updated: 12/31/2012 09:50:28PM

Stocks shoot up as
investors bet on ‘cliff’ deal

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By CHRISTINA REXRODE

AP Business Writer

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NEW YORK (AP) — The stock market shot higher on Monday even as the “fiscal cliff” neared. By the time trading ended, Republicans and Democrats still hadn’t reached a budget compromise — but investors were betting that they would.

It was a dramatic day on
what turned out to be a strong year for stocks. The Standard
& Poor’s 500 index rose
13.4 percent for the year, after finishing flat in 2011. It was the index’s best year since 2009, and it came despite overhanging problems like Europe’s debt crisis and anemic U.S. growth, bringing U.S. indexes close to their highs reached before the 2008 financial crisis.

Including dividends, the gain for the S&P 500 was even higher — 16 percent.

The close Monday was a high note in what had been a choppy day for the market, as choppy as the “fiscal cliff” deal-making that has been yanking it around. It also marked a turnaround after five straight days of “cliff”-influenced losses. The Dow Jones industrial average and the Standard & Poor’s 500 both climbed more than 1 percent. The Nasdaq composite index rose 2 percent.

Stocks fell at the opening of trading Monday and struggled for direction throughout the morning. The indecisiveness overlaid a day of dramatic budget negotiations in Washington, where lawmakers were trying to hammer out a new budget deal to avert the “fiscal cliff.” That refers to automatic tax increases and government spending cuts that will kick in without a budget deal.

Stocks jerked higher at midday following reports that the bare outline of a deal to avoid the “cliff” had been knit together. The gains faded after President Barack Obama said in the early afternoon that a compromise was “within sight,” but not finalized. Then, in the late afternoon, the indexes shot higher again. Congressional Republicans and the Democratic White House said they had agreed on some measures, but still had no final deal in hand.

At the close of trading, Dow Jones industrial average was up 166.03 points, finishing the year at 13,104.14. That’s a gain of
7.3 percent for the year, its fourth straight year of gains.

The S&P 500 rose 23.76 to 1,426.19. The Nasdaq composite climbed 59.20 to 3,019.51. For the year the Nasdaq rose
15.9 percent.


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