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AUGUST 10, 2017 / 4:44 pM
S&P
falls 1.4 percent in safety flight on North Korea tensions
DJ: 21,844.01 -204.69 NAS: 6,216.87
-135.46 S&P: 2,438.21
-35.81 8/10
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The
S&P 500 index had its biggest one-day drop in almost three months on
Thursday as investors fled riskier assets, with technology stocks leading the
charge, in response to an increasingly aggressive exchange of threats between
the United States and North Korea. U.S.
equities steepened their losses late in the session after President Donald
Trump said his earlier warnings to North Korea may not have been tough enough.
He also said the nuclear-armed nation should be "very, very nervous"
if it even thinks about attacking the United States or its allies.
Trump was responding to North Korea's claim it was completing
plans to fire four intermediate-range missiles over Japan to land near the U.S.
Pacific territory of Guam. Investors
have been jittery about North Korea since Tuesday when Trump said any threats
from Pyongyang would be "met with fire and fury like the world has never
seen."
The S&P's record close on Aug. 7 likely helped fuel its
latest sell-off. "When investors
are optimistic to the extreme, it means that most of their money is already in
the market and there's no more money coming in," Bruce Bittles, chief
investment strategist at Robert W. Baird & Co in Sarasota, Florida.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average .DJI closed
down 204.69 points, or 0.93 percent, at 21,844.01, the S&P 500 .SPX lost
35.81 points, or 1.45 percent, to end the session at 2,438.21 and the Nasdaq
Composite .IXIC fell
135.46 points, or 2.13 percent, to 6,216.87. The last time the S&P closed down more
than 1 percent was May 17 when it fell 1.8 percent. It is now on track for its biggest weekly
drop since the week before the Nov. 8 U.S. presidential election.
The technology sector .SPLRCT was the S&P's biggest drag
with a 2.2 percent drop. It has been the leading S&P gainer so far this
year, making it particularly vulnerable to a decline.
"Since these are the stocks that have been in the spotlight
the most, they tend to have the most volatility upwards and downwards,"
said Chris Bertelsen, chief investment officer of Aviance Capital Management in
Sarasota, Florida. Investors instead
turned to safe-haven assets such as gold, pushing it to a two-month high, and
the Japanese yen JPY=rose.
The utilities index .SPLRCU, often seen as a bond proxy because of its
companies' slow reliable growth and high dividends, was the only S&P sector
that ended the day up, showing a 0.25 percent gain.
The CBOE
Volatility Index .VIX, a barometer of expected near-term stock market
volatility, closed at its
highest since the election.
Macy's (M.N) shares closed down 10.2 percent and
Kohl's (KSS.N) fell almost 6 percent as the companies
continued to report a drop in quarterly same-store sales, stoking concerns that
their turnarounds may still be a long way off.
Selling was broad. Declining issues outnumbered advancing ones
on the NYSE 6-to-1; on Nasdaq, a 3.60-to-1 ratio favored decliners.
About 7.5
billion shares changed hands on U.S. exchanges, well above the 6.25
billion average for the last 20 days.
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