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OCTOBER 15, 2018 / 4:48 pm
Tech stocks drag down Wall St. as earnings worries weigh
DJ: 25,250.55 -89.44 NAS: 7,430.74 -66.15 S&P: 2,750.79
-16.34 10/15
NEW
YORK (Reuters) - U.S. stocks ended lower in a choppy trading session on Monday,
dragged down by technology stocks amid lingering worries over interest rates and corporate
earnings. The benchmark S&P 500
index teetered between positive and negative territory for much of the day but
moved definitively lower in the last half-hour of trading. The Dow, which was
positive for most of the session, reversed course.
The technology
index .SPLRCT fell
1.6 percent, weighing the most on the S&P 500, while defensive sectors such as
real estate .SPLRCR, consumer staples .SPLRCS and utilities .SPLRCU led the S&P’s major
sectors in percentage
gains.
The major stock indexes sold off sharply last week, which led to
their sharpest weekly percentage declines in seven months. Investor concerns have mounted
about the impact on corporate profits of tariffs and rising borrowing costs as
the third-quarter earnings season kicks into high gear this week.
S&P 500 companies on average are expected to report 21.6 percent
year-over-year profit growth, a decrease from the previous two quarters,
according to I/B/E/S data from Refinitiv.
Also, the Treasury Department released data on Monday showing that the
U.S. federal government
closed the 2018 fiscal year with the biggest deficit since 2012. It
ended the 12 months through September $779 billion in the red as tax cuts hit revenues and the
government paid more to
service a growing national debt.
Yields on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note were at 3.1557 percent,
holding above September’s levels but below the levels that prompted last week’s sell-off. “The market is in wait-and-see mode,” said
Keith Lerner, chief market strategist at SunTrust Advisory Services in Atlanta.
“It’s waiting for
earnings, waiting for the Fed, and waiting for economic data from China to see
if things are stabilizing.”
The
Dow Jones Industrial Average .DJI fell 89.44 points, or 0.35 percent, to
25,250.55, the S&P 500 .SPX lost 16.34 points, or 0.59 percent, to
2,750.79, and the Nasdaq Composite .IXIC dropped 66.15 points, or 0.88 percent, to
7,430.74.
Bank
of America Corp (BAC.N) shares dropped 1.9 percent after loan growth at the second-largest U.S.
bank lagged rivals and fees from advising on deals and underwriting bonds fell in the
third quarter. Apple Inc (AAPL.O) shares fell 2.1 percent and weighed the most on all three
of Wall Street’s major indexes after Goldman Sachs said there were multiple
signs of rapidly slowing consumer demand in China, which could affect demand
for iPhones this fall.
The top gainers on the S&P were L3 Technologies Inc (LLL.N), which jumped 12.8 percent, and Harris Corp (HRS.N), which climbed 11.9 percent, after the military
communication equipment providers announced an all-stock merger to create the
sixth-largest U.S. defense contractor.
Advancing issues outnumbered declining
ones on the NYSE by a 1.39-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 1.15-to-1 ratio favored
advancers. The S&P 500 posted two
new 52-week highs and seven new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 14 new
highs and 145 new lows.
Volume on U.S. exchanges
was 6.91 billion shares,
compared to the 7.82 billion average over the last 20 trading days.
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