US: Stocks edge to records as holiday season hopes offset trade questions
[NEW YORK] Wall Street stocks edged to new records on Monday amid optimism over the upcoming holiday shopping season, while European bourses mostly dipped on lingering anxiety over trade talks.
The session in the US was choppy as investors grappled with reports that Chinese officials are intent on staking a "phase one" US-China trade deal on the removal of some tariffs, a condition opposed by the Trump administration.
Those reports raised fresh doubts about another possible hurdle to the long-awaited US-China trade fight that has weighed on markets for more than a year.
But investors remain fairly upbeat about consumer sentiment following recent sales data as the market looks ahead to "Black Friday," the unofficial start of the holiday shopping season, analysts said.
"Part of the kickoff to the holiday season probably has been enhanced by cold weather in the Northeast," said Maris Ogg of Tower Bridge Advisors, noting that "people seem to be willing to spend."
"That's 70 per cent of the economy and that drives earnings. That's what the market is gonna be focused on in the long run."
The Dow, S&P 500 and Nasdaq all finished with slight gains to add to Friday's records.
European markets retreated amid uncertainty over trade.
"Stocks are in the red heading into the close after it was reported the mood in Beijing in relation to a deal is 'pessimistic'," said David Madden, market analyst at trading firm CMC Markets UK.
"It is believed that China are not happy that President Trump is not interested in rolling back on tariffs," he added.
"It is likely that this is a ploy by China, but for now dealers are keen to adopt a more risk-off approach," said Madden.
Earlier in Asia, Hong Kong stocks rallied after last week's hefty losses but investors remain on edge over violent protests that have wracked the city. Elsewhere, Asian equities diverged.
In foreign exchange markets, the pound extended gains on opinion polls showing a big lead for the ruling Conservative party ahead of next month's general election, with traders hoping a clear victory will help Prime Minister Boris Johnson push through his Brexit deal.
Shares in Madrid stock exchange operator BME, meanwhile, rose nearly 38 per cent at 35.04 euros, in reaction to a bid by Swiss exchange SIX valuing BME at 34 euros per share.
The premium over the offer price reflected investor sentiment that Euronext, which earlier said it was talking to BME about a takeover, might swoop in with a hostile counter-offer.
Beauty products giant Coty jumped 2.6 per cent after announcing a deal to pay US$600 million for a majority stake in Kylie Jenner's cosmetics and skincare company.
AFP
KEYWORDS IN THIS ARTICLE
BT is now on Telegram!
For daily updates on weekdays and specially selected content for the weekend. Subscribe to t.me/BizTimes
Capital Markets & Currencies
Europe: Shares end higher on tech support; banks slide
US: Stocks rally on cooler hiring numbers
Singapore stocks end week in the red; STI down 0.1%
Asia: Markets track Wall Street higher as rate hopes rise, eyes on US jobs
H2G Green chief to stand trial on Aug 5 amid MOM probe
Singapore shares climb at Friday’s open; STI up 0.2%