Markets |
Wall Street ends lower as oil and retailers
weigh
DJ: 17,702.22 -55.99 NAS: 5,067.02
-16.22 S&P: 2,075.00
-6.72
REUTERS/BRENDAN MCDERMID
U.S. stocks finished lower on Wednesday
after investors sold oil companies and dumped brick-and-mortar retailers after
a disappointing forecast from Macy's.
Energy stocks were bogged down
by a more than 3 percent
drop in oil prices to their lowest since mid-September on worries about growing U.S. stockpiles.
The S&P energy sector .SPNY
lost 1.91 percent, the steepest decline among the 10 major S&P sectors.
Exxon Mobil (XOM.N)
slipped 0.89 percent and weighed most on the S&P along with Apple (AAPL.O), down
0.56 percent.
It was the second straight day of what investors described as largely
directionless trading, with the U.S. Federal Reserve widely expected to raise interest
rates in December for the first time in nearly a decade.
"The market has
internalized the fact that there is going to be a rate increase," said
Donald Selkin, chief market strategist at National Securities in New York,
which has about $3 billion in assets under management.
"The market is going to drift for the next few weeks until the Fed
announces its decision, but you will see big moves in individual stocks," Selkin
said.
General Electric (GE.N) and
Amazon (AMZN.O) gave
the biggest boost to the index, with GE up 1.83 percent and the online retail
heavyweight rising 2.06 percent.
Retailers sank after Macy's (M.N) said same-store sales unexpectedly fell in the third
quarter and slashed its sales and profit forecasts for the holiday quarter
ending in January.
Macy's shares plummeted 13.99 percent, while JC Penney (JCP.N) dropped 1.84 percent despite a 6.4 percent increase in
same-store sales.
Shares of Nordstrom (JWN.N), Dillard's (DDS.N) and Kohl's (KSS.N) dropped between 3 percent and 9 percent.
Alibaba's (BABA.N)
shares lost 1.94 percent even though the Chinese e-commerce giant said sales in
its annual Singles' Day online shopping event on Wednesday hit a record $14.3
billion.
The Dow and S&P lost ground late in the day after trading close to
break-even for much of the session.
All three major U.S. indexes closed 0.32 percent weaker: the Dow Jones
industrial average.DJI lost 55.99 points to end at 17,702.22
points. The S&P 500 .SPX fell 6.72 points to 2,075. The Nasdaq Composite .IXIC dropped 16.22 points to 5,067.02.
U.S. bond markets were closed
for Veterans Day.
Six of the 10 major S&P
sectors were lower, with the utilities .SPLRCU and telecoms .SPLRCL index
leading gainers.
Apache Corp (APA.N) fell
7.33 percent after Anadarko Petroleum (APC.N) confirmed
its offer to buy the company had been rejected. Anadarko was down 3.80 percent.
Declining issues outnumbered
advancing ones on the NYSE by 1,742 to 1,304. On the Nasdaq, 1,788 issues fell
and 987 advanced .
The S&P 500 showed 15 new
52-week highs and 11 lows, while the Nasdaq posted 98 new highs and 113 lows.
Volume was low, with about 6.2 billion shares changing 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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