Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Stocks shake off disappoint­ing news, bounce back

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Technology and health care companies helped U.S. stocks rebound broadly from an early sell-off Thursday, snapping the market’s steep two-day skid.

The Dow Jones industrial average, the S&P 500 and Nasdaq dropped in the morning after another disappoint­ing economic report raised expectatio­ns among investors that the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates again to help keep the U.S. economy growing. Later in the day, all three indexes recovered from the rout.

Traders were jolted by surprising­ly slow growth in the U.S. services sector last month, the weakest in three years. That followed troubling news on business hiring and manufactur­ing earlier this week that knocked the market lower.

“The market is saying rate cuts are good, this data increases the likelihood of rate cuts, so maybe we overreacte­d a little bit in terms of selling off,” said Willie Delwiche, investment strategist at Baird.

The S&P 500 index rose 23.02 points, or 0.8%, to 2,910.63. The Dow gained 122.42 points, or 0.5%, to 26,201.04. The Nasdaq, which is heavily weighted with technology stocks, climbed 87.02 points, or 1.1%, to 7,872.26. The Russell 2000 index of smallcompa­ny stocks gained 6.72 points, or 0.5%, to 1,486.35.

While stock prices recovered from their early stumble, investors continued to shift money into the relative safety of U.S. bonds. That drove bond prices higher, lowering their yields. The yield on the 10-year Treasury fell to 1.54% from 1.59% late Wednesday.

Stocks are off to a turbulent start in October. The benchmark S&P 500 is down 2.2% for the month so far, wiping out all the index’s gain from September.

Investors are wrestling with uncertaint­y about the economy, mostly due to the costly and long-running trade war between Washington and Beijing. The market slumped early Thursday after investors weighed the latest signal of U.S. economic weakness.

“The weakness this morning was really a continuati­on of a theme of the last couple of days: economic data disappoint­ing and raising the specter that what had been manufactur­ing weakness in the U.S. was maybe becoming broader weakness,” Delwiche said.

The Institute for Supply Management, an associatio­n of purchasing managers, said that its nonmanufac­turing index sank to 52.6 from 56.4 in August. Readings above 50 signal growth, but September’s figures are the lowest since August 2016.

The index tracks a sector that accounts for more than two-thirds of the U.S. economy and which has been mostly resilient in the face of the U.S.-China trade war that has been squeezing American manufactur­ers.

On Tuesday, a private index of U.S. manufactur­ing output dropped to its lowest level since the recession year 2009.

The discouragi­ng economic data this week has shifted investors’ expectatio­ns of further interest rate cuts by the Fed.

The central bank has lowered rates by a quarter-percentage point twice this year in a bid to shield the economy from slowing growth abroad and the effects of the trade war. The odds that the Fed will cut rates again at the end of this month are now running above 88%, according to the CME Group.

Given the recent spate of downbeat economic data, all eyes will be on the federal government’s September job market snapshot, which is due out today.

Solid gains by Microsoft, which climbed 1.2%, helped drive the technology sector higher Thursday. Chipmakers were among the sector’s biggest gainers. Nvidia rose 4.8% and Micron Technology added 3.5%.

Health care, communicat­ion services and industrial stocks also helped power the market rebound. Pfizer rose 2.2%, Facebook gained 2.7% and Boeing rose 1.3%.

Financial stocks lagged until the last hour of trading, weighed down by lower bond yields. Goldman Sachs fell 0.5%.

Traders bid up shares in PepsiCo by 3.2% after the company told investors it expects to meet or beat its target for revenue growth in 2019. The solid forecast followed surprising­ly good third-quarter profit and revenue.

Tesla slid 4.2% after the electric car maker fell short of sales forecasts in the third quarter. The company delivered a record 97,000 vehicles, but still fell short of analysts’ forecasts for 99,000 vehicles.

GoPro plunged 19.2% after the camera-maker cut its profit and revenue forecasts for the year because of production delays. Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Damian J. Troise of The Associated Press.

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