Business World

Wall Street falls on oil tumble, consumer sector and Fed fears

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US stocks closed lower on Tuesday as a sharp drop in oil prices hurt energy stocks and retail stocks were pulled down by concerns about Amazon.com’s plan to boost its apparel business, while investors also worried about future Federal Reserve rate hikes.

US STOCKS closed lower on Tuesday as a sharp drop in oil prices hurt energy stocks and retail stocks were pulled down by concerns about Amazon.com’s plan to boost its apparel business, while investors also worried about future Federal Reserve rate hikes.

Health care was the brightest spot in stocks with a 0.30% rise while the consumer discretion­ary index showed a 1.25% drop in line with the energy index decline.

Oil prices fell about 2% after news of increases in supply by several key producers, a trend that has undermined attempts by the Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and other producers to support the market through reduced output.

“People really thought $45-55 was kind of the range of oil, but it is getting weaker and weaker and US producers are getting more and more eff icient,” said Ken Polcari, Director of the NYSE floor division at O’Neil Securities.

The market deepened its losses heading into the close after comments by Dallas Federal Reserve President Robert Kaplan appeared to add to investor unease about the Fed’s projected pace of monetary policy tightening.

Mr. Kaplan said technology and globalizat­ion is holding down US inflation, which suggested that low inflation might linger, said Bucky Hellwig, senior vice-president at BB&T Wealth Management in Birmingham, Alabama. “Today’s action reflects growing investor concern about the Fed’s designated path of tightening versus what the market is saying, exemplifie­d in the fed funds futures market and the lower yield and the lower inflation reports.”

Earlier, Boston Fed President Eric Rosengren said the era of low interest rates in the United States and elsewhere poses financial stability risks and that central bankers must factor such concerns into their decision making.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 61.85 points or 0.29% to 21,467.14; the S& P 500 had lost 16.43 points or 0.67% to 2,437.03 and the Nasdaq Composite had dropped 50.98 points or 0.82% to 6,188.03.

Nasdaq’s biotechnol­ogy index rose 1.30% after a 2.50% jump the previous day. The S&P technology sector fell 0.80%, with the biggest drags from Microsoft and Apple.

Declining issues outnumbere­d advancing ones on the NYSE by 2.48-to-1; on Nasdaq, a 2.28-to-1 ratio favored decliners. The S&P 500 posted 49 new 52-week highs and 10 new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 99 new highs and 87 new lows. About 7.1 billion shares traded on US exchanges compared with the 6.86 billion average for the last 20 sessions. —

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