U.S. equity markets rolled on to new records again with the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq closing at all-time highs as investors continue to lean back into the recovery trade. As COVID-19 case rates appear to be peaking or turning in some areas, investors are leaning back into energy, transportation, and hospitality stocks.
After the close, the U.S. House of Representatives passed a $3.5 trillion budget resolution and advanced a $1 trillion bipartisan infrastructure bill. The vote paves the way for Democrats to write and approve the $3.5 trillion spending package without Republicans and puts the Senate-passed infrastructure plan on a path to final passage in the House of Representatives.
Oil prices continued to climb on economic optimism, with crude oil futures rising 3% on the day, bringing oil stocks along for the ride. U.S. Treasury yields also climbed, with the yield on the 10-year note inching up to 1.29%. Bitcoin and other major cryptocurrencies sold off today after rallying through the weekend.
Tim Cook's Decade
Tim Cook celebrated ten years as the CEO of Apple (AAPL) today, and it's hard to overstate how key his leadership has been to the company's continued success. Sometimes CEOs just have good timing, but Cook proved that he could lead the company though tumultuous times, and has been an important voice for social justice and civil rights in the process.
Cook's stewardship has also been very rewarding for Apple shareholders. He steered the company to a $2.47 trillion market cap that generates nearly $275 billion in annual sales. AAPL is among the most widely-held stocks among individual and institutional investors, ETFs, mutual funds, pension funds, foreign investors, and hedge funds. For those who have remained invested in the company under Cook's stewardship, the returns have been exceptional.
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