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SEPTEMBER 7, 2017 / 5:42 pM
Wall
St. ends flat as media stocks slump, healthcare gains
DJ: 21,784.78 -22.86 NAS: 6,397.87
+4.55 S&P: 2,465.10
-0.44 9/7
(Reuters) - Wall Street
ended little changed on Thursday after a moderate late-day rally as media
stocks, which slumped on negative business updates from Walt Disney and
Comcast, were offset by gains in healthcare shares. Comcast (CMCSA.O) dropped 6.2 percent after the cable
operator warned of subscriber losses, while Disney shares fell 4.4 percent
after the company cautioned about its profit growth. The S&P 500 media
index .SPLRCME ended down 3.6 percent.
Gains in healthcare stocks such as AbbVie (ABBV.N) and Bristol-Myers Squibb (BMY.N) buoyed indexes, while strength in Microsoft (MSFT.O) and Amazon (AMZN.O) helped keep the tech-heavy Nasdaq in
positive territory.
Investors were tracking Hurricane Irma, which was bearing down on Florida on
the heels of devastation in Texas caused by Hurricane Harvey. Irma plowed past
the Dominican Republic toward Haiti after devastating a string of Caribbean
islands. With Irma looming, shares of insurers were weaker,
with the Dow Jones U.S. Insurance index off 1.9 percent. “There’s further uncertainty because of
Hurricane Irma that is supposed to be hitting Florida. You don’t know what kind
of damage it is going to do,” said John Praveen, managing director at
Prudential International Investments Advisers in Newark, New Jersey.
Combined with Harvey, in the short term, Praveen said, “maybe it will have a negative
impact upon U.S. GDP growth and it might hurt U.S. earnings, and that’s
probably why the markets are reacting negatively.”
The Dow Jones Industrial Average .DJI fell
22.86 points, or 0.1 percent, to 21,784.78, the S&P 500 .SPX lost
0.44 points, or 0.02 percent, to 2,465.1 and the Nasdaq Composite .IXICadded 4.56 points, or 0.07 percent, to 6,397.87.
Irma is the latest macro event to keep
pressure on U.S. equities following concerns earlier this week about
geopolitical tensions involving North Korea, which sparked the biggest one-day drop for the
S&P 500 in about three weeks. Adding to concerns, September historically
has been the worst month for stocks, according to the Stock Trader’s Almanac.
Still, the benchmark S&P remains near all-time highs, with
market watchers pointing to strong
earnings growth and solid economic data as helping to support stocks.
“For being in such a nervous world right now, the market has done exceptionally well,”
said Peter Tuz, president of Chase Investment Counsel in Charlottesville,
Virginia.
Investors were also digesting comments from European Central
Bank President Mario Draghi, who said the euro’s strength was already weighing
on inflation and will be a key factor for the ECB next month when it decides
how to proceed with its massive stimulus program.
General Electric (GE.N) shares sank 3.6 percent, dragging on
the S&P and the Dow, after a bearish analyst note. Apple (AAPL.O) shares also weighed on major indexes,
falling 0.4 percent after a report that the company’s new iPhone was hit with
production glitches. Financial shares
.SPSY slid 1.7 percent amid a drop in U.S. Treasury yields.
Healthcare .SPXHC was the best-performing sector, rising
1.1 percent. AbbVie (ABBV.N) shares surged 6.1 percent and
Bristol-Myers Squibb gained 5.0 percent after the drugmakers separately
reported positive developments for their respective medicines. Eli Lilly (LLY.N) shares rose 1.3 percent after it said
it would lay off about 8 percent of its employees.
Advancing issues outnumbered declining ones on the NYSE by a
1.07-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 1.06-to-1 ratio favored decliners.
About 6.4
billion shares changed hands on U.S. exchanges, above the 5.8 billion
daily average over the last 20 sessions.
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