Texarkana Gazette

Stocks end lower on Wall Street, easing back from records

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Banks and health care companies helped pull stocks on Wall Street mostly lower Wednesday, as the market eased back from its latest record highs.

The S&P 500 fell 0.5% after shedding a modest gain as the selling picked up in the last hour of trading. The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 0.7%. Both indexes set all-time highs the day before.

The tech-heavy Nasdaq composite ended essentiall­y flat after an early tech company rally lost steam. Treasury yields were mixed. Energy futures mostly fell.

Investors were focusing on a mixed batch of earnings from a variety of well-known companies, including Microsoft, General Motors and CocaCola.

The S&P 500 slipped 23.11 points to 4,551.68. More than three fourths of the companies in the benchmark index fell, with financial, health care and industrial stocks accounting for most of the decline. Those losses offset gains from communicat­ion services stocks and a mix of companies that rely on consumer spending.

The Dow fell 266.19 points, or 0.7%, to 35,490.69. Most of the blue-chip index’s stocks were in the red, led by Visa, which slumped 6.9% a day after reporting strong quarterly results.

The Nasdaq edged up 0.12 points, or less than 0.1%, to 15,235.84, and the Russell 2000 index of small companies took the heaviest losses, falling 43.58 points, or 1.9%, to 2,252.49.

Long-term bond yields fell significan­tly and weighed down banks, which rely on higher yields to charge more lucrative interest on loans. The yield on the 10-year Treasury fell to 1.53% from 1.61% late Tuesday. JPMorgan Chase fell 2.1%.

The yield on the 30-year Treasury fell below 2% for the first time in a month to 1.96%, even though rates on shorter-term U.S. bonds, like the 2-year Treasury note, have been rising.

Traders bid up shares in several companies that reported solid quarterly results. Microsoft rose 4.2% after reporting a 24% surge in profits last quarter as its cloud computing business bounded ahead. Google’s parent company, Alphabet, rose 5%, eclipsing its previous all-time high set Sept. 1, as a continued rebound in digital ad spending bolstered surprising­ly good financial results.

A mix of companies that rely on direct consumer spending also gained ground. Domino’s Pizza rose 3.1%. McDonalds rose 2.7% after reporting solid financial results as an easing of business restrictio­ns helped sales growth. Coca-Cola rose 1.9% as sales grew along with the reopening of many venues and businesses over the summer.

Some companies’ latest results fell short of investors’ expectatio­ns.

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