Daily Breeze (Torrance)

Stocks mixed after Fed cites economic growth

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Stock indexes capped a wobbly day of trading on Wall Street with mixed results Wednesday after the Federal Reserve said it was seeing improvemen­t in the economy, but not enough to start dialing down its support measures.

The S&P 500 slipped less than 0.1% after giving up a brief afternoon gain. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 0.4%, while the Nasdaq composite rose 0.7%. The yield on the 10year Treasury note held steady at 1.23%.

Following the Fed’s latest two-day policy meeting, the central bank said it was leaving its key interest rate unchanged and would continue to buy billions in bonds every month.

The Fed also noted that vaccinatio­ns were helping the economy, but it dropped a sentence in its statement that it had included after its previous meeting that said those vaccinatio­ns have reduced the spread of COVID-19. That was the only reference to the delta variant that has caused a spike in COVID cases in several hotspots in the United States and many other countries.

“The market really was not expecting any surprises, and what it ended up getting, as anticipate­d, was that the Fed would say that the economy continues to recover, but not strongly enough to alter current monetary policy,” said Sam Stovall, chief investment strategist at CFRA.

The S&P 500 slipped 0.82 points to 4,400.64. The benchmark index remains within 0.5% of the all-time high it set on Monday. The Dow lost 127.59 points to 34,930.93, while the Nasdaq rose 102.01 points to 14,762.58.

Small-company stocks drove the Russell 2000 index to a gain of 33.12 points, or 1.5%, to 2,224.95. The index had been down 0.1% before the Fed’s afternoon announceme­nt.

Beyond the Fed, investors continued to review the latest batch of quarterly earnings reports.

Google’s parent company Alphabet was a standout, jumping 3.2% after reporting a profit surge last quarter. Pfizer also rose 3.2% after its profit and revenue surged on strong sales of its COVID-19 vaccine and other medicines. The drugmaker also raised its sales and profit forecasts for the year. Boeing jumped 4.2% after the airplane maker reported a surprise quarterly profit, its first since 2019.

Solid earnings weren’t enough to lift stocks for other companies. McDonald’s fell 1.9%, despite reporting a surge in revenue and beating analysts’ forecasts as dining rooms reopened. Facebook rose 1.5%, but lost that gain and more in extended trading despite reporting after the market closed that its second-quarter earnings doubled thanks to a massive increase in advertisin­g revenue.

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