Equities got back to their winning ways, notching solid gains amid optimism that the bulls still have room to run. The Nasdaq hit its highest level since November 2000 while the Dow Jones Industrial Average and Standard & Poor’s 500 Index hit fresh all-time highs. The Dow Jones jumped 124 points (0.8%) to 15,215, the S&P 500 Index was 17 points (1.0%) higher at 1,650, and the Nasdaq Composite gained 24 points (0.7%) to 3,463.
Stocks were off to the races as financials paved the way higher when hedge-fund manager David Tepper called U.S. banks “a good sector.” Bank of America Corp. and Citigroup Inc. rose more than 2.4 percent while Goldman Sachs was the top performer with 4.89% gain. The financial sector advanced 1.7%.
Three growth-sensitive sectors also finished among the leaders despite the relative weakness across the commodity complex. Crude oil fell 1.0% to $94.20, but the energy sector rose 1.3%. Elsewhere, copper declined 2.1% to $3.289 per pound while gold shed 0.8% to $1423.70 per ounce. The basic materials sector, however, climbed 1.2%. Industrials also ended in the black as transportation-related names led the way. The Dow Jones Transportation Average jumped 1.9% to a new record high. The technology sector did not play along with other cyclical groups. Tech shares lagged throughout the day while the relative strength of biotechnology kept the Nasdag from falling too far behind the Dow and S&P.




