Los Angeles Times

Indexes mostly fall; retailers sink

- Associated press

Major stock indexes on Wall Street wobbled Tuesday and ended mostly lower, as losses by energy companies and department store operators largely edged out gains elsewhere in the market.

A solid showing for technology stocks helped lift the Nasdaq composite to another all-time high.

The Standard & Poor’s 500 index finished less than 2 points below the recordhigh close it reached Monday.

A slide in Home Depot’s stock weighed on the Dow Jones industrial average, which ended lower the day after its own record high.

Energy-sector stocks took the heaviest losses as the price of U.S. crude oil dropped 3.2%. Disappoint­ing earnings from Kohl’s sent other retailer stocks into a skid.

Stock indexes’ movements are “almost a carbon copy of yesterday,” said Jeff Zipper, managing director at U.S. Bank Private Wealth Management.

The S&P 500 index slipped 1.85 points, or less than 0.1%, to 3,120.18. The Dow fell 102.20 points, or 0.4%, to 27,934.02. The Nasdaq climbed 20.72 points, or 0.2%, to 8,570.66.

Smaller-company stocks fared better than the rest of the market, driving the Russell 2000 index up 5.95 points, or 0.4%, to 1,598.29.

Bond prices rose, sending bond yields down. The yield on the 10-year Treasury fell to 1.79% from 1.80%.

U.S. stocks have been rising for weeks as a mix of solid economic data and corporate earnings inject confidence into the market and diminished fears that a recession was imminent.

Tech stocks were among the big gainers Tuesday, led by chipmakers. Advanced Micro Devices climbed 3.5%. Broadcom rose 2.1%.

Healthcare stocks accounted for the biggest swath of gains. Pfizer rose 1.2%. Amgen gained 1.7%.

Oil producers declined as crude oil prices took another stumble. Marathon Petroleum slid 3.4%. Occidental Petroleum lost 3%.

The energy sector — which, with a gain of just 1% for the year, trails all other S&P 500 sectors — dropped 1.5% on Tuesday.

Home Depot dropped 5.4% after the home improvemen­t company reported weak sales growth for the most recent quarter and cut its forecast for the year.

Benchmark crude oil fell $1.84 to $55.21 a barrel. Brent crude oil, the internatio­nal standard, dropped $1.53 to $60.91 a barrel.

Wholesale gasoline fell 2 cents to $1.60 a gallon. Heating oil declined 4 cents to $1.86 a gallon. Natural gas fell 6 cents to $2.51 per 1,000 cubic feet.

Gold rose $2.40 to $1,473.30 an ounce. Silver rose 11 cents to $17.10 an ounce. Copper rose 3 cents to $2.65 a pound.

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