NEW YORK (CNNfn) - A contract deal between two high-tech titans woke up the bulls on Wall Street and sent technology and other stocks surging in early trading Thursday.
Shortly before 10 a.m. ET the Dow Jones industrial average rallied 109.75 points to 9,385.63. Volume on the New York Stock Exchange reached 88 million shares, with advances leading declines 1,338 to 810.
The Nasdaq Composite surged 31.13 to 2,296.33 and the S&P 500 index gained 12.59 to 1,240.29.
Bonds were slightly lower, stung by the weekly jobless claims report, which once again showed fewer people than had been expected filed for jobless benefits last week. The report, seen as a precursor to Friday's February employment-data release, wiped out the market's modest early gains, leaving the benchmark 30-year Treasury bond trading 1/32 of a point lower in price for a yield of 5.69 percent.
The dollar, however, soared to a three-month high against the yen overnight and extended its gains in U.S. trading after Tokyo once again shrugged off the yen's recent decline. The greenback also climbed to a lifetime high against the 10-week old euro overnight and remained strong in U.S. trading.
Techs shining bright
Rallying technology stocks helped lift the broader market, helped by news of a $16 billion technology deal between two of the industry's largest players, IBM (IBM) and Dell Computer (DELL).
Shares of both companies surged as investors learned Big Blue is to supply Dell with storage, microelectronics, networking and display technology for use in Dell-built computers. The seven-year deal, believed to be the largest of its kind in the high-tech industry, also includes broad patent cross-licensing between the two companies and collaboration on the development of new technology.
Shares of IBM, a Dow component, surged 7-1/16 to 173-13/16 on the news. Dell, the most actively traded Nasdaq issue, jumped 2-3/4 to 83-11/16.
Most other technology stocks also gained ground, but some of Dell's and IBM's major competitors showed signs of nervousness in early trading. Shares of Dow member Hewlett Packard (HWP) eased 1/2 to 68-5/16, Gateway (GTW) fell 1-1/8 to 68, and Compaq Computer (CPQ) was unchanged at 33-7/8.
However, Cisco Systems (CSCO) climbed 3-5/16 to 98-7/16, Intel (INTC) gained 1-1/16 to 115-3/4 and Microsoft (MSFT) traded 1-5/8 higher at 151-1/4.
Elsewhere among high-tech stocks, shares of Web site management firm Verio (VRIO) surged 8-3/4, or almost 27 percent, to 41-1/4 on news the company had worked out an agreement to market its services through America Online (AOL).
And shares of Metronet Communications (METNF) soared 3-5/16 to 46-7/16 on news the company will join forces with AT&T Canada in a $7 billion merger. AT&T (T), a member of the Dow 30, will own 31 percent of the new AT&T Canada when the deal is completed.
Financials get attention
Helping back up the technology rally, financial stocks advanced strongly, despite fears of rising interest rates ahead of the February jobs report Friday.
Shares of Dow component American Express (AXP) rallied 1-11/16 to 109-1/2 after Salomon Smith Barney started coverage of the stock with a "buy" rating and a price target of $135 a share. Calling the stock "underappreciated," analyst William Ryan said he believes American Express faces a smaller interest-rate risk than many investors believe.
Fellow Dow member Citigroup (C) climbed 1-1/8 to 59 and J.P. Morgan (JPM), also one of the 30 Dow stocks, traded 5/16 higher at 112-3/4.
-- by staff writer Malina Poshtova Zang
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