While you were sleeping: Entering no-man’s land
The flurry of corporate deals continues.
The flurry of corporate deals continues.
Wall Street was mixed amid a better than expected report on US consumer spending and disappointing corporate earnings from Exxon Mobil.
Meanwhile, the flurry of corporate deals continues as General Electric and Baker Hughes agreed to merge their oil and gas businesses, while Level 3 Communications accepted a $US34 billion cash and stock takeover offer from CenturyLink.
A Commerce Department report showed US consumer spending, a strong driver of the US economy, rose 0.5% in September, following a 0.1% decline in August.
The Federal Reserve is starting its two-day policy meeting on Tuesday. While few expect policy makers to hike interest rates this month, most expect a move in December.
"The latest data should be of comfort to the Fed," New York-based Oxford Economics head of US macroeconomics Greg Daco told Reuters.
"Spending continues to underpin growth and, combined with positive developments on the labour market and inflation, should enable the Fed to tighten policy in December."
Wall Street was mixed. In 2pm trading in New York, the Dow Jones Industrial Average eked out a 0.2% gain, while the Nasdaq Composite Index inched 0.08% higher. In 1.46pm trading, the Standard & Poor's 500 Index rose 0.15%.
In the Dow gains in Chevron and IBM shares, trading 1.4% and 0.7% higher respectively, offset declines in Nike and Exxon Mobil shares, down 3.3% and 1.6%.
Chevron’s shares rose, bucking the trend in energy stocks, after the company posted better than expected third-quarter profit. Meanwhile, Exxon Mobil posted a slide in profit for the eighth quarter in a row.
Shares of Nike dropped after Bank of America Merrill Lynch downgraded its rating on the stock to underperform from neutral.
"We now expect Nike's market share loss to Adidas and Under Armour to continue through 2017 as our meetings with manufacturers/suppliers and competitors indicated a potential narrowing of the innovation gap for Nike's pipeline relative to the competition compared to historical levels, in our view," equity analyst Robert Ohmes wrote in a research note, according to CNBC.
Also weighing on sentiment was the US presidential election, as the latest polls showed a shrinking of Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton's lead over Republican rival Donald Trump.
"The narrowing of the polls is making the market a little bit nervous because it had priced in a Clinton victory," Pennsylvania-based Brinker Capital senior investment manager Thomas Wilson told Reuters.
"This has caused some uncertainty and we all know the market hates that. I expect the market to be stuck in a no-man's land until the election."
In Europe, the Stoxx 600 Index ended the day with a drop of 0.5% from the previous close. Germany's DAX Index slid 0.3%, while the UK's FTSE 100 Index fell 0.6%, and France's CAC 40 Index dropped 0.9%.
"Holding extra cash in case of a surprise seems more prudent to a lot of managers," Colorado-based Weatherstone Capital Management president and lead portfolio manager Michael Ball told Bloomberg.
"Once that's done, they're likely to go back to their favourite companies and sectors. That will be the primary focus as they try to make gains going into year-end."
(BusinessDesk)