tue
SEPTEMBER 25, 2018 / 6:21 pm
S&P 500 dips as chip stocks and utilities tumble
DJ: 26,492.21 -69.84 NAS: 8,007.47 +14.22 S&P: 2,915.56
-3.81 9/25
(Reuters) - The S&P
500 fell on Tuesday as chipmakers were dented by ratings downgrades and
utilities declined ahead of an expected Federal Reserve interest rate hike, offsetting a boost
from the energy sector. S&P 500
financials .SPSY, including interest-rate-sensitive bank stocks .BKX, dipped
0.38 percent ahead of the expected rise in interest rates by the Fed on
Wednesday. Utilities, which tend to be favored in low-rate environments because
of their solid dividend payments, .SPLRCU slid 1.22 percent.
The
S&P 500 energy index .SPNY added 0.57 percent as Brent oil hit a four-year high, boosted by
imminent U.S. sanctions on Iranian exports, and OPEC and Russia’s reluctance to
raise output.
U.S.
consumer confidence
unexpectedly rose in September, bringing it closer to levels last seen
in 2000, the Conference Board said, underscoring strength in the labor market and the overall
economy. The data pushed the S&P 500
consumer discretionary index .SPLRCD up 0.59 percent. “A lot of the noise around trade and anything else around
politics really hasn’t
suppressed consumer confidence nearly to the degree that the other
factors have boosted it,” said Mike Dowdall, investment strategist for BMO
Global Asset Management, in Chicago.
The Philadelphia semiconductor index .SOX dropped 1.70 percent,
weighing on the S&P 500 technology index .SPLRCT, after brokerages Raymond
James and KeyBanc cut their ratings on a number of chipmakers. Intel (INTC.O) fell 2.13 percent after Raymond James
downgraded the stock.
Buoyed by strong economic growth and deep corporate tax cuts,
the S&P 500 has gained
9 percent so far in 2018. But five of the S&P 500 sector indexes are
down year to date, including the consumer staples index .SPLRCS, down 5.6
percent. Consumer staples .SPLRCS on Tuesday lost 0.73 percent. The other six
are higher, led by the technology index’s .SPLRCT 19 percent rally. “There are different stories for different
sectors, it’s a finicky little market,” said Dennis Dick, a proprietary trader
at Bright Trading LLC. “If you’re a money manager, you have to be very
careful about what you’re buying.”
The Dow Jones Industrial
Average .DJI fell 69.84 to end at 26,492.21 points, and
the S&P 500 .SPX lost 3.81 to 2,915.56. The Nasdaq Composite .IXIC rose 14.22 to 8,007.47. Amazon.com Inc (AMZN.O) provided the greatest lift to the
technology-heavy index, jumping 2.08 percent.
CenturyLink (CTL.N) tumbled 8 percent after Chief
Financial Officer Sunit Patel left the company in a surprise move to join
T-Mobile US Inc (TMUS.O) to oversee its integration with Sprint
(S.N). T-Mobile rose 0.77 percent and Sprint
added 0.31 percent.
Declining
issues outnumbered advancing ones on the NYSE by a 1.20-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq,
a 1.00-to-1 ratio favored advancers. The
S&P 500 posted 31 new 52-week highs and 10 new lows; the Nasdaq Composite
recorded 65 new highs and 54 new lows.
Volume on U.S. exchanges was 6.6
billion shares, just below
the 6.7 billion average over the last 20 trading days.
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