wed MAY 22, 2019 / 4:48 pm
Renewed U.S.-China trade tensions
push down Wall Street
DJ: 25,776.61 -100.72 NAS: 7,750.84 -34.88 S&P: 2,856.27
-8.09 5/22
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Wall
Street’s major indexes dipped on Wednesday as inflamed trade tensions between
the United States and China weighed on investor sentiment. A day after Washington’s temporary easing of
curbs against Huawei Technology Co Ltd provided respite to U.S. stocks, reports
that the White House could impose restrictions on another Chinese technology
company rattled U.S. stocks anew. Media
reports on Wednesday said the Trump administration was considering sanctions on
video surveillance firm Hikvision.
Fears that tit-for-tat
tariffs and other retaliatory actions by the United States and China will
hamper global growth have kept investors on edge, putting the S&P 500 on track to post its first
monthly decline since the December sell-off.
“Business between the U.S. and
China is not going to be what it was two months ago,” said Jim Awad, senior
managing director at Clearstead Advisors in New York. “They’re going to tighten
the screws, and we’re going to tighten the screws.” “The market is attempting to reset U.S. profit growth expectations in
light of that,” he said.
The Dow Jones Industrial
Average fell 100.72 points, or 0.39%, to 25,776.61, the S&P 500 lost 8.09
points, or 0.28%, to 2,856.27 and the Nasdaq Composite dropped 34.88 points, or
0.45%, to 7,750.84.
A tumble in shares of Qualcomm Inc and Lowe’s Companies Inc helped drag down the
benchmark S&P 500 index. A federal
judge ruled that Qualcomm
illegally suppressed competition in the market for smartphone chips by
threatening to cut off supplies and extracting excessive licensing fees. The
chipmaker’s shares plunged
10.9%. Lowe’s shares dived 11.8%
after the home improvement chain cut its full-year profit forecast. Another retailer, Nordstrom Inc, also reduced
its sales and profit forecasts. Nordstrom shares dropped 9.2%.
However, shares of Target
Corp jumped 7.8%, the most among S&P 500 companies, after the
retailer’s quarterly same-store sales and profit beat estimates.
The release of minutes from the Federal Reserve’s latest policy meeting, in which
officials agreed that their patient approach to setting monetary policy could remain in place “for some
time,” had little impact on Wall Street’s major indexes.
Declining issues outnumbered advancing ones on the NYSE by a
1.71-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 1.94-to-1 ratio favored decliners. The S&P 500 posted 28 new 52-week highs
and eight new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 43 new highs and 121 new
lows.
Volume on U.S. exchanges
was 6.00 billion shares,
compared to the 6.94 billion average for the full session over the last 20
trading days.
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