Tue
NOVEMBER 5, 2019 / 4:27 pm
S&P 500 retreats slightly after recent record
DJ: 27,462.11 +114.75 NAS: 8,433.20
+46.80 S&P: 3,078.27
+11.36 11/4
DJ: 27,492.63 +30.52 NAS: 8,434.68 +1.48 S&P: 3,074.62
-3.65 11/5
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The
benchmark S&P 500 edged lower on Tuesday, as investors paused in the wake
of a rally buoyed by hopes of a trade deal between the United States and China
that sent the three main U.S. stock indexes to record highs in the previous
session. While there was growing
optimism over a deal, investors have also shown caution, pushing up value
stocks over growth names over the past few sessions. The Russell 1000 value
.RLV index has climbed nearly 2% over the past three sessions compared to a
gain of 0.8% for the Russell 1000 growth .RLG index.
Keeping some tentativeness intact, China is pushing President Donald Trump to remove more
tariffs as part of the “phase one” deal, which may be signed this month,
according to latest reports. “The market is at an all time
high, people are getting a little skittish about the deal,” said Tim
Ghriskey, chief investment strategist at Inverness Counsel in New York. “Definitely a move to value, but it is more of a move to
financials because rates are moving higher and a move to energy because the
commodity is moving higher and those are two sectors that have gotten
absolutely mauled by the market, the valuations are cheap there.” Financials .SPSY, a big weight for value
stocks, rose 0.42% as benchmark U.S. Treasury yields hit a six-week high and
energy .SPNY, gained 0.45% as oil climbed more than 1% as the best performing
S&P sectors. The rate-sensitive real estate sector .SPLRCR dropped 1.76%.
The
Dow Jones Industrial Average .DJI rose 30.52 points, or 0.11%, to 27,492.63,
the S&P 500 .SPX lost 3.65 points, or 0.12%, to 3,074.62 and
the Nasdaq Composite .IXIC added 1.48 points, or 0.02%, to 8,434.68. The
S&P 500 and the Nasdaq closed at record highs for a second session on
Monday, while the Dow hit a record high for the first time since July.
Apart from hopes of a resolution to the trade war, stocks have received a boost
from a largely better-than-expected third-quarter earnings season, the Federal
Reserve’s interest rate cut and upbeat economic data. Data on Tuesday showed the reading on the ISM services index improved to
54.7 in October from 52.6 in September, above expectations of 53.4,
according to economists polled by Reuters, easing concerns that a slowdown in
the manufacturing sector was spreading to other parts of the economy.
Over three quarters of
S&P 500 companies that
have reported results so far have beaten profit expectations, Refinitiv data showed. Earnings for
the quarter are now expected to dip 0.8%, an improvement from the 2.2% decline
expected on Oct. 1.
A 2.05% rise in Boeing Co’s (BA.N)
shares provided the biggest boost to the blue-chip Dow Jones index after
Chairman Dave Calhoun said the company’s board believed CEO Dennis Muilenburg
“has done everything right” following two fatal crashes of its 737 MAX jet.
Helping the Nasdaq advance was Adobe Inc (ADBE.O),
which gained 4.25%
as the Photoshop software maker raised its fourth-quarter digital media
annualized recurring revenue target and gave a strong forecast for fiscal 2020. Uber Technologies Inc (UBER.N) fell 9.85% as the
ride-hailing service posted a bigger third-quarter loss from a year earlier.
Declining issues outnumbered advancing ones on the NYSE by a
1.13-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 1.10-to-1 ratio favored advancers. The S&P 500 posted 58 new 52-week highs
and no new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 148 new highs and 40 new lows.
Volume on U.S. exchanges
was 7.89 billion shares,
compared to the 6.61 billion average for the full session over the last 20
trading days.
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