US market close: Shares close lower breaking a three-day winning streak
Nicole Rojas
Traders
gather for the IPO of real estate investment trust MGM Growth
Properties LLC., on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in
lower Manhattan in, New York, U.S., April 20, 2016.
Reuters
US stocks closed lower on 21 April, ending in the red
following a three-day winning streak. Severe declines in the consumer
staples, telecoms and utilities sectors weighed heavily on the three
major averages, with the Dow Jones slumping below the 18,000 level.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 113.75 points, or 0.6%, to
settle at 17,982.52. The blue-chip gauge was weighed down by losses in
Travelers Companies and Verizon Communications Inc.
The declines in both companies also influenced the S&P 500, which
dropped 10.92 points, or 0.5%, to settle at 2,091.48. Nine of its 10
main sectors—led by telecoms and utilities — closed with losses. "The
S&P 500 is definitely weighed on by United, Travelers and Verizon,"
JJ Kinahan, chief strategist at TD Ameritrade told CNBC. "You have a few stocks that have had oversized (impact)."
Telecoms was the biggest decliner, edging 2.7%. lower. According to
CNBC, Travelers was down 10% from a year ago. Meanwhile, Verizon dropped
3.3%, contributing heavily to the decline in the Dow. An ongoing strike
by the company's wireline workers was expected to hurt its earnings in
the current quarter, Verizon said.
The Nasdaq Composite dropped just 2.24 points, or less than 0.1%, to
close at 4,945.89. Apple, which dropped nearly 1.1% into bear market
territory, weighed on the tech-heavy average. All three major averages
remain on pace for their second-straight positive week.
In US economic news, the weekly jobless claims came in at 247,000,
the lowest it has been since 1973. The Philly Fed Index was at minus 1.6
in April, CNBC noted. "I do think from an economic standpoint one of
the bright things we'd been seeing was these regional manufacturing
numbers pick up pretty reasonably well. Then Philly Fed came out of
nowhere," Ben Pace, Chief Investment Officer at HPM Partners, said.
US crude oil futures, pressured by the disappointing Philly Fed and
strength in the dollar, dropped $1, or 2.26%, to $43.18 a barrel.
The US dollar index held higher, with the euro at $1.127 and
the yen near 109.45 yen against the greenback. Gold prices dropped
following four straight sessions of gains to settle down $4.10 at
$1,250.30 an ounce.
Overseas, European stocks closed mixed after the European
Central Bank kept rates unchanged. The STOXX Europe 600 Ban index closed
almost 1.4% higher. In Asia, the Shanghai Composite dropped 0.7% while
the Nikkei 225 surged 2.7%.
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