Stock market news live updates: Stocks rebound after September slump, Dow posts best start to October since 2003

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Stocks advanced on Friday, with equities recovering some losses after closing out a volatile month in the red.

The Dow outperformed compared to the other two major indexes, as shares of Merck (MRK) jumped after the drugmaker released positive data on its COVID-19 antiviral pill. The 30-stock index ended higher by more than 480 points, or 1.4%, and posted its best start to October since 2003.

The S&P 500 also gained, adding about 1.2% as cyclical stocks led the way higher. The session also marked the blue-chip index's best start to an October since 2007. The Nasdaq increased by 0.9%, and the small-cap Russell 2000 rose by nearly 2%.

Friday's moves come following a losing month for U.S. equities as a confluence of concerns about the monetary and fiscal policy backdrop compounded with ongoing jitters over the coronavirus and inflation.

The S&P 500 ended a seven-month winning streak in September, posting an about 4.8% monthly decline. The Dow ended September lower by 4.4%. The Nasdaq underperformed, shedding 5.4% amid a broad rotation away from growth and technology stocks as expectations for inflation and higher rates took holding.

"As I look at my 'what am I going to be afraid of list' today, there are a lot of things on that list," Scott Wrenn, Wells Fargo Investment Institute senior global equity strategist, told Yahoo Finance on Thursday. "We don't really think earnings are going to be that much of a mystery or concern to the market. We know we're going to get out of this year with a reasonable amount of earnings growth. I think there is, though, the overriding theme of, are we going to have embedded inflation? What might the Fed do about it? Is the Fed going to remain easy? "Those types of things ... I think those are the overriding concerns."

"We've had such a big run-up in the market that to have a 5% pullback or something off the top after the market basically doubled in 15 months, I think you have to put this in the right context," he added. "And while there's a lot of things to worry about, many of them have a very low probability of causing a lot of long-term problems for the market."

As of Thursday's close, the S&P 500 was still up about 15% so far for the year-to-date, buoyed by outperformance in the cyclical energy and financials sectors that would stand to benefit from rising commodity prices and interest rates. On Friday, investors eyed the latest print on personal consumption expenditures (PCE), which showed the biggest rise in inflation since 1991 in August.