Tech stocks surged on Friday as Wall Street cheered the blowout quarterly reports from three of the world's biggest tech companies.
The PowerShares QQQ Trust exchange-traded fund, which tracks the tech-heavy Nasdaq 100, rose 1.6 percent. The broader Nasdaq composite surged more than 1 percent at the open and traded near a record high. The Nasdaq 100, which is made up of the 100 largest companies in the composite index, rose 1.6 percent to a record.
Leading the ETF higher were shares of Amazon, Microsoft and Google-parent Alphabet; their stocks rose 8.1 percent, 6.5 percent and 4 percent, respectively.
E-commerce giant Amazon reported earnings per share of 52 cents a share, way ahead of a Thomson Reuters estimate of 3 cents a share. Amazon Web Services, the company's cloud business, was its main driver for growth, with sales leaping 42 percent on a year-over-year basis.
Amazon also received a boost in sales from Whole Foods, which it acquired in late August.
"We would characterize last night's Amazon September results as a 'Picasso-like quarter' with the company handily beating all metrics across the board," Daniel Ives, head of technology research at GBH Insights, said in a note Friday. "Last night's quarter ... is another feather in Bezos' cap."
Microsoft, meanwhile, beat Wall Street earnings expectations by 12 cents a share as its commercial cloud business topped $20 billion in annualized revenue for its fiscal first quarter.
Google-parent Alphabet reported adjusted earnings per share of $9.57, well above a Thomson Reuters estimate of $8.33 a share, as the company saw a higher-than-expected surge in the volume of clicks on Google ads across the world, especially in Asia.
Tech was best-performing sector on Friday, with the Technology Select Sector SPDR ETF popping 1.7 percent.
Information technology has handily outperformed the broader U.S. stock market this year. The sector is up about 30 percent in 2017, while the S&P 500 has gained approximately 15 percent.
The broader market also rose on Friday, receiving a boost from stronger-than-expected economic data. The S&P 500 gained 0.4 percent.
The first reading on third-quarter GDP showed the U.S. economy grew by 3 percent, above an estimate of 2.5 percent.
"There were some inventory disruptions because of the hurricane but the economy is doing pretty well," said David Kelly, chief global strategist at JPMorgan Funds.
Hurricanes Harvey and Irma struck parts of Texas and Florida in late August and early September. Excluding inventory investment, the economy grew at a 2.3 percent rate, slowing from the second quarter's 2.9 percent pace.
Equities have reached record highs recently in part because of improving economic data. Consumer sentiment numbers are due at 10 a.m. in New York.
—CNBC's Anita Balakrishnan and Reuters contributed to this report.
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