Business World

NAFTA replacemen­t agreement lifts Dow and S&P

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NEW YORK — The Dow and S&P 500 began the fourth quarter on a positive note on Monday, after a last-minute deal to salvage the North America Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) as a trilateral pact helped ease trade worries, although major indexes finished off their session highs.

Canada and Mexico accepted more restrictiv­e commerce in the new United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement, which will make it harder for global automakers to build cars cheaply in Mexico and aims to bring more jobs to the United States.

Industrial stocks, and more specifical­ly auto and rail-related shares rose. Ford Motor Co. gained 0.8%, while General Motors Co. advanced 1.6%. Among railroads, Kansas City Southern rose 2.9%.

The industrial sector, sensitive to trade developmen­ts in recent months, was up 0.9%, its best day in five weeks.

“It is good news not only for NAFTA and North America in general but a lot of market participan­ts are really viewing this as a positive for future negotiatio­ns, especially with China,” said Lindsey Bell, investment strategist at CFRA Research in New York.

“It is short on detail but the market seemingly doesn’t care, I am definitely interested in seeing exactly what the details are.”

The biggest boost to the industrial­s, however, was General Electric Co., which rose 7.1% and was set for its best day in threeand-a-half years after replacing Chief Executive John Flannery with board member Larry Culp, who, investors hope can transform the company’s portfolio more quickly.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 192.9 points, or 0.73%, to 26,651.21, the S&P 500 gained 10.61 points, or 0.36%, to 2,924.59 and the Nasdaq Composite dropped 9.05 points, or 0.11%, to 8,037.30.

October is traditiona­lly one of the tougher months for the S&P, although LPL Financial’s senior market strategist Ryan Detrick points out the S&P 500 has averaged a 3.3% return during October in midterm election years.

Aside from industrial­s, the materials and energy sectors also rose more than one percent. Energy stocks got a boost as crude oil prices hit their highest level since 2014 on a combinatio­n of the new trade agreement and US sanctions on Iran.

Small-cap stocks were under pressure, with the Russell 2000 off 1.39%. Smaller names had been seen as more immune to trade pressures and the index is now off nearly four percent from its Aug. 31 high. The real estate and utilities sectors led decliners.

Still gains, faded late in the session and the Nasdaq was negative, weighed down by declines in Facebook, Inc. off 1.2% and Intel Corp., down 1.8%.

Tesla, Inc. shares soared 17.3% as signs it had met targets for quarterly production numbers added to relief at Chief Executive Elon Musk’s settling a lawsuit with regulators that could have forced him out.

Declining issues outnumbere­d advancing ones on NYSE by 1.34 to one; on Nasdaq, a 1.88-to-one ratio favored decliners. —

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