Futures contracts tied to the major U.S. stock indexes pointed to a largely flat start to Friday’s session, leaving Wall Street on track for modest weekly losses.
Dow Jones Industrial Average futures added 28 points in extended trading, implying an opening gain of the same amount.
S&P 500 and Nasdaq futures also pointed to slight gains.
The overnight moves followed one of the week’s better days on Thursday as oil’s biggest one-day rally ever soothed investors who’d grown worried over financial and job losses in the energy sector.
Though West Texas crude futures at $25.32 per barrel is less than half the price the contracts traded at as recently as January, the one-day rally was enough to carry the major equity indexes higher.
The Dow rose 469.93 points, or 2.2%, on Thursday but remained on pace to finish the week down 1% as of the session’s close. Chevron led the blue-chip index higher, rallying 11% and singlehandedly added more than 50 points.
The S&P 500 also gained 2.2% to finish the day at 2,526.90 with energy sector components up over 9%.
Both the Dow and S&P 500 remain more than 25% below their respective all-time highs set in February as marketplace jitters over the spread of COVID-19 foster volatile trading on Wall Street.
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