mon
AUGUST 21, 2017 / 5:44 pM
S&P
500 index gains after recent selloff; energy stocks fall
DJ: 21,703.75 +29.24 NAS: 6,213.13
-3.40 S&P: 2,438.37
+2.82 8/21
(Reuters) - The benchmark U.S. S&P 500 stock index
ended up slightly on Monday after two days of declines, though a drop in oil
prices weighed on energy shares and tensions between the United States and
North Korea kept investors on edge. Market
participants began to turn their focus to the Federal Reserve meeting at
Jackson Hole, Wyoming later this week which will be attended by Fed Chair Janet
Yellen, European Central Bank president, Mario Draghi, and other global central
bankers.
Investors are looking for further direction on where monetary policy is headed
given persistently low inflation in the U.S. and Europe. Fed Vice Chair William
Dudley, who has in the past supported accommodative monetary policy, earlier
this month said that the recent easing in financial conditions, despite Fed
interest rate increases, is a reason to keep plans to tighten policy in place.
"That confluence of strong growth and low inflation, which is somewhat
like nirvana for equity investors, we don't think can last forever," said Wayne
Wicker, chief investment officer at ICMA-RC in Washington.
"We're hopefully getting a couple of more data points to
see where the Fed takes their temperature on where they're feeling the economy
is at this juncture so that we can anticipate if something happens in the
fourth quarter or not."
Geopolitical concerns are
still weighing on investor sentiment also. The United States and South Korea began their annual autumn joint military
exercises on Monday, heightening tensions with North Korea, which called
the drills a "reckless" step toward nuclear conflict.
Still, absent U.S. economic data and with the second-quarter
earnings nearly over, "it’s a quiet Monday and people are still feeling the effects of last week...
there's just not a whole lot of catalysts," said Ian Winer, head of
equities at Wedbush Securities in Los Angeles.
U.S. stock futures trading volume fell during the two hours that
people left their offices to get a glimpse of the first total solar eclipse to
unfold across the country in nearly a century.
About 174,000 S&P 500 e-mini futures ESc1 futures changed
hands over the two hour period ending 3:30 p.m. E.T. on Monday, down about 46
percent for the comparable period last year. [L4N1L74AA]
The Dow Jones Industrial Average .DJI rose
29.24 points, or 0.13 percent, to 21,703.75, the S&P 500 .SPX gained
2.82 points, or 0.12 percent, to 2,428.37 and the Nasdaq Composite .IXIC dropped
3.40 points, or 0.05 percent, to 6,213.13.
The S&P 500 energy index .SPNY was down 0.6 percent, leading sector
declines in the S&P 500, with U.S. crude oil prices settling down 2.4
percent, giving back last week's gains. While
the benchmark S&P 500 index is still up 13.5 percent since last year's U.S.
election, it had fallen
2.1 percent in the last two weeks. That's the most since the two weeks
before the election. The Dow ended above
its 50-day moving average after briefly falling below it during the session,
while the S&P 500 remained below its 50-day technical level. Also, Monday was the ninth straight session
in which the New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq had more stocks making new
52-week lows than highs, the longest such streak in 18 months.
Shares of sporting good
retailers took a hit after analysts downgraded ratings on Nike (NKE.N), Foot Locker (FL.N) and other companies. Nike's shares
fell 2.4 percent, while Foot Locker shares slid 7.4 percent. Johnson Controls (JCI.N) rose 3.3 percent to $38.27, among the
top S&P 500 gainers, after saying its CEO change would happen earlier than
announced. Herbalife (HLF.N) surged 9.8 percent after the
nutritional supplement maker said it would buy back $600 million of shares
after ending talks to be taken private.
Declining issues outnumbered advancing ones on the NYSE by a
1.01-to-1 ratio; on the Nasdaq, a 1.30-to-1 ratio favored decliners.
The day's volume
was among the lowest of the year, with 5.3 billion shares changing hands
on U.S. exchanges, compared with the 6.3 billion daily average for the past 20
trading days, according to Thomson Reuters data.
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