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Stocks add to gains, shrug off Fed and data fears

Investors on Tuesday sloughed off dour housing data, choosing instead to focus on encouraging second-quarter earnings that have mostly absorbed the brunt of spiking interest rates and a slowing economy. The big picture: The S&P 500 popped by nearly 3%, with markets choosing to downplay a drop in June housing starts. Why it matters: With recession fears on the front burner, a brutal bear market has gripped Wall Street for months. What they’re saying: Some market analysts believe the market is looking oversold and is ripe for buying — hence why benchmarks have quietly stitched together an improbable win streak. Thought bubble: After months of seemingly relentless volatility, can we believe that stocks are finally at (or near) bottom? Alas, a rally that takes place in a bear market is still…a bear market (or a “dead-cat bounce”).
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