Stock market news live updates: S&P 500, Nasdaq post best week since July with stimulus talks in focus

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Stocks traded higher Friday as investors continued to mull chances of a virus-relief package amid mixed signals from officials as to what size of a proposal they might support.

The S&P 500 and Nasdaq each posted their best weekly gain since July as of Friday’s close, rising about 3.7% and 4.6%, respectively. The Dow gained 3.3% on the week for its best gain since August.

Traders have closely monitored developments out of Washington to weigh whether a comprehensive or partial stimulus package might emerge before Election Day on Nov. 3, with additional relief measures viewed as a key tenet in encouraging the recovery in the virus-stricken economy. The Department of Labor’s weekly report on new jobless claims Thursday morning showed a worse than expected 840,000 individuals filed for first-time unemployment insurance benefits last week, though continuing claims dipped back below 11 million for the first time since late March.

President Donald Trump said during Rush Limbaugh’s radio show Friday afternoon that he wants to “see a bigger stimulus package, frankly, than either the Democrats or Republicans are offering.” The remarks marked an about-face from his stance earlier this week, when he said in a Twitter post that he had told his negotiators to end stimulus talks until after the election, promptly sending markets tumbling.

But earlier in the day Friday, multiple outlets reported that the White House intended to offer a stimulus proposal totaling $1.8 trillion, for a sum about $400 billion below the plan House Democrats voted to advance last week. This, however, would still mark an increase from the $1.6 trillion Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin had floated in prior discussions with Pelosi.

Adding to optimism around a deal in some form, White House economic adviser Larry Kudlow told Fox Business on Friday that President Donald Trump “wants to do a deal.”

A day earlier, Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Mnuchin discussed further stimulus in an about 40-minute conversation Thursday afternoon, Pelosi’s spokesperson Drew Hammill said in a Twitter post.

Hammill reported that Mnuchin “made clear the President’s interest in reaching” an agreement on a comprehensive package, after Pelosi said earlier in the day that she would not support a standalone proposal aimed at providing aid only to airlines. However, the White House has offered mixed signals as to whether it would in fact support a broader legislative package, with Trump and White House spokespeople offering conflicting takes on their willingness to back a more comprehensive proposal over the past couple days.