Markets |
Wall Street mixed as Apple tumbles to
two-year low
DJ: 17,720.50 +9.38 NAS: 4,737.33
-23.35 S&P: 2,064.11
-0.35
(Reuters) U.S.
stocks ended mixed on Thursday, with gains in telecommunications and consumer
staples helping make up for a tumble in Apple to a two-year low. The S&P 500 and Dow Jones swerved between gains and losses before
ending virtually flat. Up 0.90 percent, Microsoft was the largest upward force
in the S&P 500.
Apple Inc (AAPL.O), a
mainstay in many portfolios, was the heaviest drag on the three major indexes,
slumping 2.35 percent to $90.34, its lowest since June 2014, as worries
festered about slowing demand for iPhones.
A rally in the S&P 500 from its February lows petered out in
the last two weeks amid underwhelming corporate reports and economic data that
clouded the path of interest rate increases this year. The index is now up
about 1 percent in 2016.
On Thursday, two U.S. Federal Reserve officials said the central
bank should raise rates if data points to an improving economy.
"I don't see any conviction on the part of buyers or
sellers at this point," said Warren West, principal at Greentree Brokerage
Services in Philadelphia. "It's a slow, grinding economy, so you're going
to get slow, grinding stocks."
The Dow Jones industrial
average .DJI finished 0.05 percent higher at
17,720.5 points and the S&P 500 .SPX ended down 0.02 percent at
2,064.11. Pinched by Apple's drop, the
Nasdaq Composite .IXIC fell 0.49 percent to 4,737.33.
Seven of the 10 major S&P 500 sectors ended higher, led by a
0.72 percent gain in telecommunications .SPLRCL and a 0.54 percent rise in
consumer staples .SPLRCS.
Monsanto Co (MON.N) rose
8.39 percent after media reports said the seed company was a possible
acquisition target.
First-quarter earnings
for S&P 500 companies have mostly beaten analysts' expectations, but are
estimated to have fallen 5.4 percent from a year ago, according to Thomson
Reuters data.
Kohl's Corp (KSS.N)
tumbled 9.17 percent after posting an unexpected drop in quarterly comparable
sales.
Declining issues outnumbered advancing ones on the NYSE by 1,533
to 1,449. On the Nasdaq, 1,912 issues fell and 909 advanced.
The S&P 500 index showed 28 new 52-week highs and 15 new
lows, while the Nasdaq had 25 new highs and 104 new lows.
About 7.2
billion shares changed hands on U.S. exchanges, matching the daily
average for the past 20 trading days, according to Thomson Reuters data.
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