By Kate Gibson
As crude on Friday hit a high for the year above $74 a barrel,
energy shares rallied, fueling the broader U.S. stock market
towards weekly gains. But if oil's price gains continue, what has
been viewed as a bullish signal could easily turn bearish for U.S.
stock market investors.
Positive U.S. and European economic data, along with weakness in
the dollar, helped in supporting oil's surge, with the front-month
futures contract lately up $1.13 at $74.04 a barrel, after hitting
$74.72 a barrel, its highest level so far this year. .
On Wall Street, energy shares fronted the broad market's
advance, with shares including Cameron International Corp. (CAM),
Smith International Inc. (SII) and Massey Energy Co. (MEE) all
gaining more than 4%.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJI) added 135.05 points to
9,485.10, while the S&P 500 Index (SPX) climbed 15.97 points to
1,023.34. The Nasdaq Composite Index (RIXF) rose 25.70 points to
2,014.92.
While crude's climb on Friday had it rallying to its highest
point yet for the year, a barrel of oil remains roughly half of
where it stood at its height last summer, when crude-oil futures on
July 11 hit an intraday high of $146.65, with the Dow industrials
shed 129 points that day.