Wall Street took off on another rally on Wednesday, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average extending Tuesday's surge by gains from components like Boeing (BA  ) and Nike (NKE  ). Stocks were also boosted by the United States Senate announcing a final deal on a $2 trillion stimulus package to help ease the impact of the coronavirus on both the American public and businesses. Although the full extent of the bill has yet to be published, Senate is expected to vote after market close on Wednesday, which will move the bill to a vote in the House of Representative until it can be signed into law by President Donald Trump.

Here's how the market settled at mid-week:

S&P 500 Index (SPY  ): +1.15% or +28.23 points to 2,475.56

Dow Jones Industrial Average (DIA  ): +2.39% or +495.64 points to 21,200.55

Nasdaq Composite Index (QQQ  ): -0.45% or -33.56 points to 7,384.29

In Major Stock News, shares of Boeing skyrocketed Wednesday after the Senate and White House agreed to a $2 trillion stimulus bill that has set aside funds for the bleeding travel industry. Norwegian Cruise Line (NCLH  ), Royal Caribbean (RCL  ), American Airlines (AAL  ), Delta Air Lines (DAL  ), United Airlines (UAL  ) and Carnival (CCL  ) shares also spiked due to the anticipated stimulus package. The retailer Nike increased after the company reported higher-than-expected sales for its fiscal third quarter.

In Stock Sector News, most sectors continue to post performance gains as the market heads toward the end of the week. The majority the increased on Wednesday included Industrials +5.29%, Real Estate +4.50%, Energy +4.49%, Utilities +2.84%, Financials +2.66%, Materials +2.20%, Health Care +1.27% and Consumer Discretionary +1.10%. The few that posted negative performance were Communication Services -1.58%, Information Technology -0.28% and Consumer Staples -0.17%.

Lastly, in Commodity and Currency News, crude prices slightly dropped on Wednesday due to the scale of the coronavirus pandemic still being uncertain. West Texas Intermediate (USO  ) fell just under -0.10%, while Brent Crude (BNO  ) dropped -0.72%, bringing barrel prices to $24-$28 each. Gold (GLD  ) also fell by -0.84%, although the metal is still over a high of about $1,600 per ounce. Finally, the U.S. Dollar (UUP  ) also lost some relative strength, with the DXY Index falling -0.82%.