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NOVEMBER 29, 2017 / 5:43 pM
Nasdaq
falters as investors flee tech for banks
DJ: 23,940.68 +103.97 NAS: 6,824.34 -88.02 S&P: 2,626.07
-0.97 11/29
(Reuters) - The Nasdaq posted
its biggest one-day drop in more than three months on Wednesday as investors
fled high-flying technology stocks and shifted to banks and other pockets of
the market that could benefit from improving economic conditions, lower
regulations and taxes as well as higher interest rates. Gains in financial, industrial and healthcare stocks boosted the
Dow industrials, giving the blue-chip index another record closing high, and
they helped the benchmark S&P 500 index finish near flat.
The S&P tech
sector .SPLRCT, which has propelled the market’s record-setting rally
this year, shed 2.6 percent for its biggest daily decline in over five months. Shares of Amazon.com (AMZN.O), Apple (AAPL.O), Google parent Alphabet (GOOGL.O) and Facebook (FB.O) fell between 2 percent and 4 percent.
Among the year’s other high fliers, Netflix (NFLX.O) slid 5.5 percent and the Philadelphia
semiconductor index .SOX dropped 4.4 percent.
Financials
.SPSY rose 1.8 percent,
adding to Tuesday’s gains and resulting in their biggest two-day rise since
just after the 2016 U.S. election of President Donald Trump. JP Morgan (JPM.N) rose 2.3 percent and Wells Fargo (WFC.N) climbed 2.0 percent. The industrial sector .SPLRCI added 0.9 percent, led
by transportation stocks such as Southwest Airlines (LUV.N), railroad Union Pacific (UNP.N) and package delivery company UPS (UPS.N).
“We are certainly seeing a change in leadership at least for
today in that we are taking
profits from technology and redistributing those profits to areas that will
benefit from lower taxes, less regulation, higher interest rates and
kind of later stages of the economic cycle,” said Michael Arone, chief
investment strategist at State Street Global Advisors in Boston.
The
Dow Jones Industrial Average .DJI rose 103.97 points, or 0.44 percent, to
23,940.68, the S&P 500 .SPX lost 0.97 point, or 0.04 percent, to
2,626.07 and the Nasdaq Composite .IXIC dropped 88.02 points, or 1.27 percent, to
6,824.34.
While Amazon dropped, shares of other retailers posted
sharp gains, including Target (TGT.N) up 8.9 percent and Macy’s (M.N) up 8.2 percent, as holiday shopping
season has begun in earnest over the past week.
“There may be a little bit of a thought that
Amazon isn’t going to kill every retailer out there,” said Paul Nolte,
portfolio manager at Kingsview Asset Management in Chicago.
”We’re seeing some transportation stocks doing better in
expectation that maybe this is going to be a pretty good holiday season with
consumer confidence doing well and wage growth picking up a little bit,” Nolte
said.
Investors are keenly
focused on tax-reform
legislation in Congress, with hopes that a corporate tax cut would further fuel
the record-setting rally in equities. Congressional
Republicans scrambled to reformulate their bill to satisfy lawmakers worried
about how much it would expand the federal deficit, as the measure moved toward
a U.S. Senate floor vote later this week.
In the latest batch of encouraging economic data, the U.S. economy grew faster
than initially thought in the third quarter, notching its quickest pace
of expansion in three years.
Outgoing Federal Reserve Chair Janet
Yellen told congressional leaders the U.S. economy has gathered steam this year
and will warrant continued interest rate increases amid a strengthened
global recovery It was Yellen’s final
scheduled testimony on Capitol Hill. Her nominated replacement, Jerome Powell,
on Tuesday had defended plans to potentially lighten regulation of the
financial sector.
In corporate news, Chipotle Mexican
Grill (CMG.N) shares rose 5.6 percent after the
restaurant chain said it was seeking a turnaround expert to lead the company.
About 8
billion shares changed hands in U.S. exchanges, well above the daily
average of roughly 6.5 billion over the last 20 sessions.
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