Dow ends off highs on Friday to wrap trading in May as investors ready for Memorial Day holiday

Referenced Symbols

The Dow and S&P 500 on Friday booked gains for the day, week and month ahead of Memorial Day weekend, with U.S. financial markets in the U.S. closed Monday. Jitters about inflation have been a key feature of trading sentiment in May and investors wrapped up the month with the Federal Reserve's preferred measure of inflation, affirming rising pricing pressures. The personal-consumption expenditure index approached its highest level in nearly 13 years at 3.6%, higher than the 2.9% that economists' surveyed by Dow Jones had forecast. That marks the loftiest level since 2008. On a month-over-month basis, PCE inflation rose 0.6% in April, while the core rate up rose 0.7%. The Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA, +0.19% closed out the session up 0.2% at 34,429, and logged a weekly gain of 0.9% and a monthly advance of 1.9%. The S&P 500 index SPX, +0.08% closed the session up less than 0.1% higher and notched a 1.2% weekly gain and a 0.6% gain in May. The Nasdaq Composite Index COMP, +0.09%, meanwhile, closed less than 0.1% higher on Friday but clinched a weekly gain of 2.1%, while producing a monthly loss of 1.5%, representing its first monthly slide in seven months.

Read Next

Read Next

A ‘bloody crypto’ Memorial Day weekend? Some bitcoin bulls are dreading the long U.S. holiday break

Bullish investors in bitcoin aren't jazzed about the upcoming U.S. Memorial Day holiday weekend.

More On MarketWatch