Los Angeles Times

Stocks mostly fall but Nasdaq hits new high

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Stocks closed mostly lower Monday as Wall Street pumped the brakes after a recent run of strong gains.

The Standard & Poor’s 500 index fell 0.2%, as losses in healthcare, f inancial and energy companies outweighed gains in technology, communicat­ion and utilities stocks. The pickup in technology companies, whose profits have proved more resistant to the pandemic’s effect on the economy, helped nudge the Nasdaq composite to its third consecutiv­e all- time high.

Investors are optimistic that one or more coronaviru­s vaccines will soon be cleared for distributi­on in the U. S., setting the stage for an economic turnaround. But worries are mounting about more economic pain as states impose new restrictio­ns on businesses in a bid to stem a surge in virus cases and hospitaliz­ations.

Traders also continue to hold out hope that Washington will deliver another round of f inancial aid for Americans and businesses hurt most by the pandemic.

The S& P 500 dropped 7.16 points to 3,691.96. The Dow Jones industrial average slid 148.47 points, or 0.5%, to 30,069.79. The Nasdaq gained 55.71 points, or 0.4%, to 12,519.95. The Russell 2000 index of small company stocks slipped 1.20 points, or 0.1%, to 1,891.25.

The benchmark S& P 500 had one of its best months in decades during November and added more to it last week. In addition to virus vaccine optimism, hope has built that Washington may be able to get past its partisansh­ip to deliver some form of aid for the still- struggling economy.

The worsening pandemic is pushing government­s around the world to bring back varying degrees of restrictio­ns on businesses, keeping customers away from them and threatenin­g to drag down the economy through what’s expected to be a bleak winter.

Job growth in the United States slowed sharply last month, a report on Friday showed, and the numbers may get worse. But if Congress fails to reach a deal to carry the economy through the winter, stocks could be set up for more declines.

Uncertaint­y over the effect of the virus surge, the timing of a vaccine rollout and potential aid from Washington has helped slow the momentum for financial markets and made technology stocks go- to buys for traders. Apple rose 1.2%, while Facebook gained 2.1% and Netflix climbed 3.5%.

Stocks that would benef it most from a reopening, healthier economy took some of the sharper losses, giving back some of their big recent gains. Energy stocks in the S& P 500 fell 2.4% after their 16.8% surge in November, for example. Bank stocks were also weaker than the rest of the market, and roughly two- thirds of the stocks in the S& P 500 fell.

Chevron fell 2.7% amid worries that the worsening pandemic could choke off more demand for oil and energy.

Other companies whose profits desperatel­y need the economy to improve and the world to get closer to normal also fell. Mall owner Simon Property Group dropped 4.8%, Olive Garden owner Darden Restaurant­s fell 2.4% and airline operator Alaska Air Group lost 3.6%.

In Europe, stock indexes closed mostly lower, and the value of the British pound fell as negotiator­s in the United Kingdom’s exit from the European Union seemed to remain stuck on the same issues that have prevented a deal for months.

In Asia, markets were mixed as relations between the U. S. and China, the world’s two largest economies, remain tense.

The yield on the 10- year Treasury fell to 0.93% from 0.96% late Friday.

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