wed FEBRUARY 27, 2019 / 5:25 pm
Wall Street steadies after
Lighthizer, Powell, Cohen testimonies
DJ: 25,985.16 -72.82 NAS: 7,554.51 +5.21 S&P: 2,792.38
-1.52 2/27
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The
S&P 500 closed down slightly on Wednesday but well above its session low
after testimonies to U.S. Congress from trade and central bank officials as
well as President Donald Trump’s former lawyer brought few major surprises. U.S. trade representative Robert Lighthizer
told a congressional hearing the United States and China still had hard work
ahead to settle their trade dispute in his first public comments since Trump
announced a delay to Chinese import tariffs on Sunday. Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell told
Congress the central bank would stop shrinking its $4 trillion balance sheet
this year, ending a process investors say is at cross-purposes with its current
pause on interest rate hikes.
The S&P
had drifted gradually higher after hitting a session low around 10.30 a.m. and swerved in and out of positive
territory in afternoon trading. “The
two things that have been market
drivers have been central bank policy and trade negotiations. Two of the
most important guys in those areas testified today. When they said reasonable
and measured things, (stocks) recovered,” said Brian Battle, director of
trading at Performance Trust Capital Partners in Chicago.
Also on Wednesday, Trump’s former lawyer Michael Cohen called the president a “conman”
but said he had no direct
evidence Trump colluded with Moscow to bolster his White House campaign
ahead of the 2016 election. Brian
Belski, chief investment strategist at BMO Capital Markets in New York said
that the market recovered when investors realize there would not be “some kind of bombshell out of
Cohen’s testimony.” He also saw
India-Pakistan tensions as a support for U.S. assets as investors sought
alternatives to emerging markets.
The Dow Jones Industrial
Average fell 72.82 points, or 0.28 percent, to 25,985.16, the S&P 500 lost
1.52 points, or 0.05 percent, to 2,792.38 and the Nasdaq Composite added 5.21
points, or 0.07 percent, to 7,554.51.
Optimism on trade and Fed policy had boosted equities from
December lows in recent weeks, with the S&P 500 index roughly 5 percent
below its record closing high hit in late September. “Investors are stepping back
and taking a pause to see how these news events play out,” Carol Schleif,
Deputy Chief Investment Officer, Abbot Downing in Minneapolis, MN.
Of the 11 major S&P sectors, seven closed lower with the
healthcare index 0.5 percent decline weighing the most. Health insurer and
pharmacy benefit manager shares slipped after a Senate hearing and the
introduction of a bill aimed at moving all Americans into a government health
insurance program on Tuesday. A 15 percent drop in Mylan
NV shares was another drag after the generic drugmaker missed quarterly profit
estimates and forecast weak 2019 earnings.
Best Buy Co Inc
jumped 14 percent after the consumer electronics retailer beat analysts’
estimates for quarterly same-store sales, while announcing a dividend hike and
a share buyback plan.
Declining issues outnumbered advancing ones on the NYSE by a
1.05-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 1.07-to-1 ratio favored advancers. The S&P 500 posted 25 new 52-week highs
and 4 new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 58 new highs and 30 new lows.
Volume on U.S. exchanges
was 7.30 billion shares,
compared with the 7.34 billion average for the last 20 trading days.
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