Fri
NOVEMBER 29, 2019 / 1:51 pm (Thursday was thanksgiving)
Wall Street slips as U.S.-China tensions weigh, investors watch
retail
DJ: 28,164.00 +42.32 NAS: 8,705.18
+57.24 S&P: 3,153.63
+13.11 11/27
DJ: 28,051.41 -112.59 NAS: 8,665.47 -39.70 S&P: 3,140.98
-12.65 11/29
(Reuters) - Wall Street’s
major indexes ended Friday’s shorter session lower as U.S.-China discord over
Hong Kong fueled investor anxiety about trade talks and retail stocks dipped as
in-store Black Friday sales appeared to draw smaller crowds. China on Thursday threatened to retaliate
against a U.S. law backing pro-democracy protesters in Hong Kong with potential
measures including barring drafters of the legislation from mainland China,
Hong Kong and Macau, the editor of China’s state-backed Global Times tabloid
said in a tweet.
And on Friday a Reuters report cited two sources saying the U.S.
government may expand its power to stop more foreign shipments of products with
U.S. technology to China’s Huawei, due to frustration that a blacklisting
failed to end supplies to the world’s largest telecoms equipment maker. While the S&P closed above its session
low, selling intensified in the last hour of trading after the report on
Huawei.
All three of Wall
Street’s major indexes had registered record highs earlier in the week when
hopes were higher for an
imminent “phase one” U.S.-China trade deal. The trade-sensitive Philadelphia Semiconductor index
.SOX fell 1.1%.
For the month preliminary Refinitiv data showed that
the S&P rose 3.4%
while the Dow gained 3.7%
and Nasdaq climbed 4.5%.
It was the the biggest
monthly gain for all three major indexes since June. The U.S.-China news gave “a little bit of a
weaker tone” to Friday’s market, Jack Janasiewicz, a portfolio manager and
strategist at Natixis Investment Managers Solutions in Boston.
The
Dow Jones Industrial Average .DJI fell 112.59 points, or 0.4%, to 28,051.41,
the S&P 500 .SPX lost 12.65 points, or 0.40%, to 3,140.98 and
the Nasdaq Composite .IXIC dropped 39.70 points, or 0.46%, to 8,665.47.
While many
traders took the day off after Thursday’s U.S. Thanksgiving holiday,
Janasiewicz said others
were likely on the sidelines as they waited for economic data including the jobs report due out next
week and any retailer comments about initial numbers for the year-end holiday shopping season. “We’ve got a good slate of data coming next week that’ll give
us a better indication where we are in the cycle and people are going to want
to know how did today’s retail sales go,” he said.
Spot check reports on retailers around the country showed fewer people than in past
years lining up outside stores at the start of Black Friday, suggesting that online
buying may have taken the shine off America’s biggest shopping day. “Looking at foot traffic volume is not quite
as telling any more. It’s going to be online shopping as well. That’s going to
be the bigger one,” said Janasiewicz. “Are people getting up, getting
dressed and going out and shopping physically or are they just getting dressed,
moving to the couch and turning on their computer and ordering online.”
The S&P 500 retail sector .SPXRT
fell 0.8%, with Kohl’s Corp (KSS.N)
dropping 2.7% and Gap (GPS.N) falling 1.8%. Top retailer Walmart Inc
(WMT.N) rose 0.3% while Costco (COST.O)
fell 0.3% and electronics retailer Best Buy Co Inc (BBY.N)
also dipped. Shares of Tech Data Corp (TECD.O)
jumped 12.3% as private equity firm Apollo Global Management (APO.N)
raised its bid for the U.S. information technology equipment distributor to
about $5.14 billion.
Declining issues outnumbered advancing ones on the NYSE by a
1.86-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 1.35-to-1 ratio favored decliners. The S&P 500 posted 18 new 52-week highs
and one new low; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 75 new highs and 28 new lows.
Trading volume was light
in the truncated session with 3.55 billion shares changing hands on U.S. exchanges compared with the 6.86
billion average for the last 20 sessions.
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