While you were sleeping: UPDATED Wall St mixed as Comey impact absorbed
Political uncertainty remains a high risk to markets under the Trump administration.
Political uncertainty remains a high risk to markets under the Trump administration.
Wall Street was mixed as investors tried to assess the long-term impact of US President Donald Trump's stunning firing of FBI director James Comey.
"We were not expecting to see a quick succession of moving toward the administration's agenda, and this certainly is not reducing that contentious environment," Eric Wiegand, a New York-based senior portfolio manager at the Private Client Reserve at US Bank, told Reuters.
Others agreed.
"All in all, this does not support the view that the US Trumpflation trade faces an easy road ahead of it," Michael Every, head of financial markets research at Rabobank Group in Hong Kong, wrote in a note, Bloomberg reported.
"It underlines that real surprises can pop up out of the box at any time right now."
At the close of trading in New York, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 32.67 points, or 0.16%, to 20,943.11. However, the Nasdaq Composite Index rose 0.14% to 6129.14 and the Standard & Poor's 500 Index added 0.11% to 2399.63.
The Dow moved lower as slides in shares of Walt Disney and those of Boeing, down 2.2% and 1.2% respectively, outweighed gains in shares of Chevron and those of Caterpillar, recently up 1.4% and 1.0% respectively.
Disney disappoints
Walt Disney shares fell after the company posted disappointing quarterly earnings.
"Although we think that Disney can probably grow faster than most of its peers in the long run because of its global studio and parks businesses, it is also more weighted down by tepid growth and longer-term margin compression at media networks," Brian Wieser, an analyst at Pivotal Research Group, wrote in a note, Bloomberg reported.
Energy stocks rose with the price of oil, gaining 3.2% to $US47.33 – its biggest one-day gain since December – as a US Energy Information Administration report showed that domestic crude inventories dropped more than expected in the week to May 5.
To be sure, increases in US crude production remain a concern.
"Growing oil output in the US, which reached its highest level since August 2015, will remain a thorny issue for price bulls," Abhishek Kumar, senior energy analyst at Interfax Energy's Global Gas Analytics in London, told Reuters.
There were also mixed clues about the outlook for US interest rate increases.
While Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland President Loretta Mester on Monday warned against complacency towards raising rates, Dallas Fed President Robert Kaplan was more cautious.
"I still believe the base case for removal of accommodation is three times this year, but I'm very cognizant of the fact that inflation pressures have been more muted," Kaplan told reporters after an event at the Bush Institute in Dallas, Reuters reported. "There's no question that the path toward 2-percent inflation has been slow and uneven."
In Europe the Stoxx 600 Index finished the day with a 0.2% advance from the previous close. France's CAC40 Index gained 0.1%, as did Germany's DAX Index, while the UK's FTSE 100 Index rose 0.6%.
(BusinessDesk)