While you were sleeping: Wall St recovers
UPDATED Dow rises 54 points and latest US economic data are upbeat.
UPDATED Dow rises 54 points and latest US economic data are upbeat.
Wall Street rose, recovering some of the previous day's decline, as US President Donald Trump reached a deal with congressional leaders to extend the US debt limit until December 15.
Meanwhile, Federal Reserve vice chairman Stanley Fischer said he would resign next month, citing "personal reasons."
"It has been a great privilege to serve on the Federal Reserve board and, most especially, to work alongside chair [Janet] Yellen...," Fischer noted in his resignation letter published on the Fed's website. His term was set to expire in June 2018.
Mr Fischer's departure "adds further uncertainty to the already murky outlook for the future of the central bank's leadership," according to Royce Mendes, an economist at CIBC, Bloomberg reported.
At the close of trading in New York, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was up 54.33 opoints, or 0.25% to 21,807.64. This followed a 234-point fall on Tuesday, The Nasdaq Composite Index climbed 0.3% to 6393.31 and the Standard & Poor's 500 Index rose 0.3% to 2465.54.
The Dow moved higher as gains by Home Depot and Chevron, up 2.5% and 2.4% respectively, outweighed declines in United Technologies and Verizon, 1.6% and 1.0% respectively.
"You have opposing forces kind of keeping the market from breaking out to a new high, but yet the fundamental data seem to be keeping it from breaking down and selling off significantly," Walter Todd, chief investment officer of Greenwood Capital in Greenwood, South Carolina, told Reuters.
"You kind of have these opposing forces pushing on each other and keeping the market in a very narrow range,"
The latest US economic data were upbeat. An Institute for Supply Management report showed its non-manufacturing activity index rose to 55.3 in August, up from 53.9 in July, which was the lowest level in 11 months.
Trade deficit widens
Separately, a Commerce Department report showed the trade deficit widened 0.3% to $US43.7 billion in July.
"The US economy carried a little more momentum than originally thought," Jennifer Lee, a senior economist at BMO Capital Markets in Toronto, told Reuters.
"However, some of that momentum will be blunted by, for starters, Hurricane Harvey."
In Europe, the Stoxx 600 Index ended the session with a 0.1% gain. France's CAC 40 Index rose 0.3%, Germany's DAX Index climbed 0.8% and the UK's FTSE 100 Index fell 0.3%.
European Central Bank policy makers gather on Thursday. Investors will closely eye ECB President Mario Draghi's post-meeting comments including on the euro.
"Despite the single currency's rise to a three-year high in trade-weighted terms, the president has not yet made any significant attempts to talk it down," Capital Economics economist Jennifer McKeown said in a note.
"If he wanted to pull the euro down, he could state that the recent increase has reflected geopolitical factors and that the exchange rate now does not properly represent the fundamental outlook for the euro-zone economy or monetary policy.
"He could even downplay expectations of QE tapering next year. We ... think that the immediate risks to the euro are skewed to the upside," she said, adding that her forecast that the currency would end this year and next year at $US1.15 was "reliant on renewed tightening by the US Fed and some easing of geopolitical concerns and related safe haven flows."
(BusinessDesk)
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