And here's yet another article on the latest from Greece:
Greece sets parliament vote on reform commitments to EU | Reuters
Markets |
China relief fuels Wall St. gains; Apple drops
DJ: 17,548.62 +33.20 NAS: 4,922.40
+12.64 S&P: 2,051.31
+4.63
REUTERS/LUCAS JACKSON
U.S. stocks closed higher on Thursday after Wall Street
found relief in Beijing's efforts to halt a rout in Chinese stocks, which lifted
markets around the world.
Shares of Apple bucked
the market and logged their first five-day losing streak since January as
investors worried that consumers in China might have less money to spend on iPhones.
Wall Street had fallen sharply in the previous session as market
turmoil in China, a rout in
commodity prices, the Greek debt crisis and a major outage on the New York
Stock Exchange spooked investors.
China's securities
regulator, in its most drastic step yet to arrest a selloff on Chinese
stock markets, banned
shareholders with large stakes in listed firms from selling for the next six
months.
About 30
percent has been knocked off the value of Chinese shares since mid-June.
Some investors fear that the turmoil
in the Chinese market could destabilize the global financial system,
making it a bigger risk than the Greek crisis.
Adding to cautious optimism on Wall Street, European markets rose on hopes that Greece might be able to win a deal that could keep
it in the euro zone. Greek Prime
Minister Alexis Tsipras has until midnight to propose spending cut plans.
“There a relief that (China's selloff) didn't continue. There's
a relief that there doesn't seem to be any belligerent tone coming out of Greece," said Steve Goldman,
principal of Goldman Management in Short Hills, New Jersey.
The Dow Jones industrial
average .DJI rose 33.2 points, or 0.19 percent, to
end at 17,548.62. The S&P 500 .SPX gained 4.63 points, or 0.23 percent, to
2,051.31 and the Nasdaq Composite .IXIC added 12.64 points, or 0.26 percent, to
4,922.40.
All three indexes earlier traded up 1 percent or more.
"There was a bit more optimism this morning and then just a
general fallback as the day went on," said Giri Cherukuri, head trader at
OakBrook Investments LLC, which oversees $1.3 billion in Lisle, Illinois.
Seven of the 10 major S&P 500 sectors were higher, with the
financial index .SPSY leading the gainers with a 0.77 percent rise.
The NYSE, which accounted for about 13 percent of the volume of
U.S. stocks traded last month, said Wednesday's halt was due to a technical
problem that stemmed from new software rolled out the previous evening.
U.S. second-quarter earnings season is getting under way with
major U.S. banks scheduled to report next week.
Shares of Walgreens Boots Alliance (WBA.O), the
largest U.S. drug store chain, jumped 4.24 percent after the company raised its
full-year profit forecast.
Coty's (COTY.N)
shares fell 4.7 percent after Procter & Gamble (PG.N)
agreed to sell its beauty business to the company in a deal that values the
business at $12.5 billion. P&G shares dipped 0.41 percent.
Apple dropped 2.04 percent to $120.07, just over a dollar above
its 200-day moving average, closely watched by traders.
On Friday, investors will
look to a press conference by Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen for new clues
about when the central bank will begin to raise interest rates for the first
time since 2006.
A hike in interest rates increases the cost of borrowing,
crimping corporate profit margins.
Advancing issues outnumbered declining ones on the NYSE by 1,773
to 1,284, for a 1.38-to-1 ratio on the upside; on the Nasdaq, 1,757 issues rose and 997 fell
for a 1.76-to-1 ratio favoring advancers.
The benchmark S&P 500 index posted 9 new 52-week highs and
17 new lows; the Nasdaq Composite
recorded 34 new highs and 84 new lows.
About 6.6
billion shares traded on all U.S. platforms, according to BATS exchange
data, below the average of 7.1 billion in the past five sessions.
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