Tesla Stock's 8% Surge Fuels S&P's Best Day Of December
The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 330 points as the stock market looked to put a dismal 2022 in the rearview mirror.

Shares of Tesla, one of the worst-performing major stocks of 2022, jumped Thursday, headlining a broader gain in the stock market, which looks to cap a no good, very bad year on a positive note. The American automaker sparked a 1.7% jump for the S&P 500 and a 2.6% gain for the tech-heavy Nasdaq--each index's best daily performance of December--while the Dow Jones Industrial Average that doesn't include Tesla rose 1.1%, or 350 points, in early trading. The broader increases largely come as a reaction to the release of the latest employment data from the Labor Department, revealing initial jobless claims rose 4% last week to 225,000 as the market cheers on any indication of a softening labor market that could lead the Federal Reserve to relent on its interest rate hikes. Bond markets also climbed, with yields on 10-year U.S. Treasury notes down six basis points to 3.83%. The Dow, S&P and Nasdaq are each on pace for their worst annual return since 2008. But the highest inflation in four decades accompanied the rally, leading the Fed to increase interest rates in an effort to slow the economy. Like Tesla, other historically high-growth stocks have also underperformed the market, with Amazon, Netflix and Meta all falling 50% or more year-to-date. More than $800 billion. That's how much market capitalization Tesla lost from its November 2021 high of about $1.2 trillion to its $381 billion valuation Thursday. Tesla Stock Crash Worsens: Losses Top $895 Billion As Rival Carmaker Warns Of 'Challenging' Weeks Ahead (Forbes)