By Anora Mahmudova and Sara Sjolin, MarketWatch

S&P 500 and Russell 2,000 end at record highs

NEW YORK (MarketWatch) -- U.S. stocks posted small gains on Friday, but they were enough to lift them into record territory. The S&P 500 and Russell 2,000 closed at record levels, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average finished above 18,000 for the first time this year.

It was also banner day for the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite, which ended at its highest level since March 2000.

Friday's move higher helped the main indexes finished with weekly gains for a second straight week.

The S&P 500 (SPX) closed near its intraday record, adding 8.51 points, or 0.4%, to 2,096.99. Over the week, the benchmark index gained 2%. Six of the 10 main sectors finished with gains on Friday. The energy sector rallied as hope that oil prices have bottomed persisted amid a rally in the commodity.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJI) added 46.97 points, or 0.3%, to 1,8019.35, with half of its 30 components ending with gains. The blue-chip index gained 1.1% over the week. American Express was leading the decliners for the second day in a row, as its price target was cut by analysts after the credit-card company announced the end of an important business relationship with Costco.

The Nasdaq Composite (RIXF) outperformed other indexes, adding 36.22 points, or 0.8%, to 4,893.84. The index gained more than 3% over the past week.

The Russell 2000 (RUT) added 6.86 points, or 0.6%, to 1,223.12 and gained 1.5% over the week.

Randy Frederick, managing director of trading and derivatives at the Schwab Center for Financial Research, said he was troubled to see the record levels occur so soon.

"Options market is signalling some warnings signs. Namely, the open interest in put/call ratio is at very high levels. That indicates that either investors are very nervous or they are positioning for a sharp pullback," Frederick said.

"The only reason the market rose to record highs is because investors think oil is stabilizing after a few weeks of pick-up in prices and I think that reaction was overly positive. This development is troubling," he said.

Markets brushed off disappointing numbers from the University of Michigan consumer-confidence report earlier.

Phil Orlando, chief equity strategist at Federated Investors, said that the disappointing reading on consumer sentiment is the result of a uptick in energy prices.

"It appears that consumers are not ready to believe that low gasoline prices will last, since they have been bouncing. Poor retail sales over the past two months, including Christmas shopping season, confirm that. Consumers will need more time to finally start spending," Orlando said.

Orlando said that stock still have room to move higher, despite their already-high valuations.

"Given low interest rates and low inflation, price-to-earnings valuations should be higher than they are right now, so we expect the S&P 500 rise to 2,350 by the end of the year. The fourth-quarter earnings came in better than expected, even on the backdrop of lower consumer confidence," Orlando said.

Data: In economic news, consumer sentiment slipped in February to a three-month low, according to media reports citing the University of Michigan index released Friday. Separately, the prices the U.S. paid for imported goods fell sharply again in January mainly because of much cheaper oil, a trend that is keeping inflation under wraps. The drop was less than expected, however, while export prices also decreased.

Weekly Baker Hughes (BHI) rig-count number turned out to be a nonevent, as markets didn't react to news. Total rotary rig count in the U.S. fell by 98 to 1,358 as of Feb 12. Oil futures (CLH5) were already up sharply and held their gains after the report, settling up 3.1% at $52.78 a barrel.

Earnings: Reporting ahead of the bell, food company J.M. Smucker Co.(SJM) said sales slipped in the fiscal third quarter, dented by weak volumes in the company's U.S. retail-coffee segment. Shares dropped initially, but recovered and rose 1.1%.

Movers and shakers:Zynga Inc.(ZNGA) slumped 16% after the games-maker said late Thursday its fourth-quarter loss widened significantly more than expected and its revenue forecasts fell short of expectations.

Groupon Inc.(GRPN) jumped 6.3% as investors looked past the company's weak outlook and focused on news that its Ticket Monster business is a target for acquisition by several companies.

CBS Corp.(CBS) rose 3.8% after it said late Thursday its fourth-quarter profit fell compared with the same period a year ago, but revenue rose.

CyberArk Software Ltd.(CYBR) rallied 16% after a solid fourth-quarter report released late Thursday.

For more on today's notable stocks, read Movers & Shakers column.

Other markets: European stock markets posted solid gains after better-than-expected fourth-quarter economic-growth numbers, and as Greece and its creditors showed signs of warming up to each other in the deadlock over debt payments.

Asian markets closed mostly higher, with the Hong Kong market posting its biggest gain in three weeks.

Gold prices (GCG5) rose 0.5% to $1,227.10, while the dollar (DXY) was flat. 10-year U.S. Treasurys fell, sending yield up 4 basis points to 2.03%.

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