Monday, July 21, 2014

US stocks end lower as Ukraine, Gaza weigh on markets



US stocks finished lower Monday, July 21, 2014, as geopolitical worries weighed on sentiment during the first trading session of a busy week of corporate earnings reports. AP FILE PHOTO/MARK LENNIHAN



NEW YORK–US stocks finished lower Monday as geopolitical worries weighed on sentiment during the first trading session of a busy week of corporate earnings reports.


The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 48.45 points (0.28 percent) to 17,051.73.


The broad-based S&P 500 declined 4.59 (0.23 percent) to 1,973.63, while the tech-rich Nasdaq Composite Index fell 7.44 (0.17 percent) to 4,424.70.


All three indices rallied significantly from morning declines that took the S&P 500 as low as 1,965.77.


Western powers have ratcheted up the pressure on Russia over the apparent shooting down of a Malaysian passenger jet over rebel-held east Ukraine, with the US insisting that Moscow force pro-Russian insurgents to cooperate with an international probe into the disaster.


Meanwhile, the death toll continued to rise in Gaza, where Israel has undertaken a ground assault against Hamas.


“The market is high and has been very strong,” said Mace Blicksilver, director of Marblehead Asset Management. “But there are a lot of problems around too.”


Markets were awaiting a stream of major earnings news, including reports early Tuesday from Coca-Cola, DuPont and McDonald’s. Apple and Microsoft were to make their announcement after the market closes Tuesday.


Oil-services company Halliburton gained 0.1 percent after net income for the second quarter rose 20 percent to $774 million and the company announced it had authorized $4.8 billion in additional stock repurchases.


Pharmaceutical company Allergan, which is fighting off an unsolicited takeover bid by Valeant Pharmaceuticals International, announced it was cutting 1,500 employees, about 13 percent of its workforce, plus another 250 vacant positions. Shares rose 2.2 percent.


Fast-food chains McDonald’s and Yum Brands were under pressure as Shanghai officials shut a food supplier to the companies because of allegations workers at a factory mixed expired meat with the fresh product. Dow component McDonald’s lost 1.5 percent, while Yum, which owns the KFC chain, dropped 4.3 percent.


Herbalife, a nutritional products marketer, tumbled 11.2 percent as activist investor William Ackman of Pershinq Square Capital Management announced a presentation Tuesday to outline charges of fraud against the company.


The company dismissed Ackman’s criticism as “an attempt to manipulate Herbalife’s stock price for Pershing Square’s financial gain,” according to an Herbalife statement last week.


Bond prices rose. The yield on the 10-year US Treasury dipped to 2.47 percent from 2.48 percent Friday, while the 30-year fell to 3.26 percent from 3.29 percent. Bond prices and yields move inversely.





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