Wall Street finished the week with a listless session overnight
as a decline in big ticket factory goods did little to assuage
investors' economic worries and left the major indexes slightly
lower.
The market posted a modest loss for the week.
Durable goods orders dropped 0.3 per cent in May after a sharp
4.7 per cent drop the month before, according to the US Commerce
Department, the first back-to-back declines in two years.
Economists expected orders to rise 0.4 per cent. Corporate spending
remained strong, however, giving investors hope that the economic
slowdown may not be severe.
Yet with the US Federal Reserve's Open Market Committee meeting
on Wednesday and Thursday and widely expected to hike
interest rates yet again Wall Street's chronic anxiety about
economic growth overshadowed trading, and likely will continue to
do until the Fed's decision is announced on Thursday afternoon.
"The business spending within the durable goods report was
encouraging once you got past the headline numbers," said Jeff
Kleintop, chief investment strategist for PNC Financial Services
Group in Philadelphia. "But even with that, there's a lot of
investors, if they've got an idea for a trade, they're not going to
do it until you get past the Fed meeting."
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The Dow Jones industrial average fell 30.02, or 0.27 percent, to
10,989.09.
Broader stock indicators were just below the flatline. The
Standard & Poor's 500 index lost 1.10, or 0.09 percent, to
1,244.50, while the Nasdaq composite index dropped 1.51, or 0.07
percent, to 2,121.47.
Bonds continued their selloff from the previous session, with
the yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note rising to a
four-year high of 5.23 percent from 5.20 percent late Thursday. The
dollar was mixed against other major currencies, while gold prices
rose.
Oil prices edged higher as traders remained concerned about
rising international demand, tight refinery capacity and continued
unrest in the Middle East. A barrel of light crude settled at
$US70.87, up US3 cents on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
With energy prices potentially stirring inflation, the Fed has
become increasingly hawkish on raising rates to combat rising
prices, which has led some on Wall Street to consider whether
policy makers may go with a half percentage point increase in the
nation's benchmark rate. Most observers, however, predict another
quarter percentage point hike, along with a statement saying the
Fed may still raise rates down the road.
"If it's just the quarter point, and the Fed still says it could
raise, then we could be in for a tough summer," said Jay Suskind,
head trader for Ryan Beck & Co. "The only thing that could save
the summer is corporate earnings, whether they come in strong
enough so that the economy can weather the rate hikes, or weak
enough for the Fed to stop raising."
Concerns about rates dominated the week's trading, increasing
volatility but ultimately leaving stocks little changed. For the
week, the Dow slipped 0.23 percent, the S&P 500 lost 0.56
percent and the Nasdaq fell 0.4 percent.
In corporate news, software maker Oracle Corp. saw its quarterly
earnings jump 27 percent, beating Wall Street's forecasts by a
penny per share after one-time charges for acquisition expenses.
Revenues surged 25 percent for the quarter, and the company's
forecast for the current quarter met analysts' projections. Oracle
rose US57 cents to $US14.90.
Anadarko Petroleum Corp. dropped $US3.49, or 7.2 percent, to
$US44.90 after the company said it would acquire two rivals,
Kerr-McGee Corp. and Western Gas Resources Inc., for a total of
$US2.1 billion. Kerr-McGee soared $US18.31, or 36 percent, to
$US68.61 on the news, while Western Gas surged $US18.76, or 46
percent, to $US59.67.