Markets |
Small gain on Wall St. as investors eye rate
hike
DJ: 17,758.21 +27.73 NAS: 5,083.24
-12.06 S&P: 2,081.72
+3.14
(Reuters) Wall Street ended modestly higher after a
choppy session on Tuesday as gains in consumer discretionary stocks offset a
drop in Apple and investors hunkered down for a potential interest rate hike
next month.
Apple's shares (AAPL.O) fell
3.15 percent after Credit Suisse said the iPhone maker had cut component orders
by as much as 10 percent, indicating weakening demand for its newest
smartphones.
The stock was the biggest drag
on the three major indexes. After falling in the four previous sessions, the
S&P 500 flittered between losses and gains for much of the session before
finishing 0.15 percent higher at 2,081.72 points.
"We could face a little
more of this kind of trading as we see people position around the idea of a
rate increase," said Kurt Brunner, a portfolio manager at Swarthmore Group
in Philadelphia. "Over next couple weeks, it could be a little sloppy
before we head into Thanksgiving."
The report on Apple inflamed
already-existing fears of a slowdown in global growth, especially in China, a
key market for many U.S. companies including Apple, ahead of the crucial
holiday shopping season.
Data on Tuesday showed
persisting deflationary pressure in China and followed disappointing trade data
over the weekend.
Companies will also be hit with
higher borrowing costs if the U.S. Federal Reserve raises interest rates from
near-zero levels next month, as is widely expected after Friday's strong jobs
report.
Still, the Dow Jones industrial average .DJI rose 0.16 percent to finish the day at
17,758.21 points. The Nasdaq Composite .IXIC dropped 0.24 percent to 5,083.24.
The prospect of a rate hike
sent the dollar .DXY to a seven-month high. A strong dollar eats into the overseas
sales at U.S. companies.
Following a dramatic selloff in August, fueled by fears about a slowing
Chinese economy, and then a recovery in October, helped by corporate report
cards that were not as bad as expected, the S&P 500 remains up about 1
percent for the year while the Dow is down marginally.
Seven of the 10 major S&P
sectors were higher on Tuesday, with the consumer discretionary sector's
.SPLRCD 0.82 percent advance leading the gainers, helped by an 0.86 percent
increase in Walt Disney (DIS.N) and a
0.64 percent rise in Amazon.com (AMZN.O).
Apple suppliers Skyworks (SWKS.O),
Avago (AVGO.O),
Cirrus Logic (CRUS.O) and
Qorvo (QRVO.O) were
down between 3.9 percent and 10 percent.
Among other gainers, D.R.
Horton (DHI.N)
surged 8.27 percent after its quarterly profit jumped 44 percent. Other homebuilders
also rose.
Advancing issues outnumbered
declining ones on the NYSE by 1,749 to 1,325. On the Nasdaq, 1,426 issues fell
and 1,373 advanced.
The S&P 500 index showed
five new 52-week highs and six new lows, while the Nasdaq recorded 85 new highs
and 100 new lows.
About 6.7 billion shares changed hands on U.S.
exchanges, below the 7.1 billion daily average for the past 20 trading days,
according to Thomson Reuters data.
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