NEW YORK — U.S. stocks rose Friday after some mixed signals on big banks' profits and inflation did little to dent Wall Street's belief that easier interest rates are on the way.
The S&P 500 climbed 0.6% to close its fifth winning week in the last six. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 247 points, or 0.6%, and Nasdaq composite added 0.6%. All three indexes had been on track to set all-time highs in afternoon trading but finished shy of them.
Bank of New York Mellon climbed 5.2% for one of the market's bigger gains after it reported better profit for the spring than analysts expected. Nvidia and other highly influential Big Tech stocks also helped lift the market after a slide the prior day, which interrupted their rocket ride higher amid a frenzy around artificial-intelligence technology.
They helped offset a drop for Wells Fargo, which sank 6% even though the San Francisco-based bank reported stronger profit than analysts expected. It said a key underlying measure of profit fell from a year ago and that its net interest income could remain in the bottom half of the range it had forecast for the full year.
In the bond market, which has been home to some of Wall Street's strongest action this week, Treasury yields yo-yoed after the release of the latest update on inflation. It said prices rose more at the wholesale level last month than economists expected, which was a letdown after data on Thursday said inflation at the consumer level was better than expected.
But after a couple initial swings, Treasury yields calmed and remained lower than they were late Thursday.
''It's still going to take some time before we know whether yesterday's number or today's was the aberration,'' said Chris Larkin, managing director of trading and investing at E-Trade from Morgan Stanley.
Some of the acceleration in Friday's data could be the result of higher profit margins for businesses, which can swing sharply and some analysts called irrelevant to the inflation fighters at the Federal Reserve.