The New York Times - 08.10.2019

(ff) #1

B2 0 N THE NEW YORK TIMES BUSINESSTUESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 2019


Months

36 2510 30
Years

240

250

260

270

’16 ’18

400

500

600

700 thousand

’16 ’18

90

100

110

120

130

’16 ’18

3

4

5%

’16 ’18

0

2

4

6

$8 a bushel

’10 ’12 ’14 ’16 ’18

0

50

$100 a barrel

’10 ’12 ’14 ’16 ’18

0

1

2

3

4

5

6%

’10 ’15 ’19

90

100

110

120

’14’15’16’17’18’19

1.0

1.1

1.2

1.3

$1.4

’14’15’16’17’18’19

0

1

2

3%

0

1

2

3%

’18 ’19

+1.0

+0.5

0.0

–0.5

–1.0

–1.5

Financials %
Technology
Health care
Consumer staples
Utilities
Communication services
Industrials
Consumer discretionary
Energy
Real estate
Materials

+1.9
+1.7
+1.6
+1.6
+1.5
+1.4
+1.1
+1.0
+0.6
+0.6
+0.5


  1. Vanguard Total Bond Market Index Adm(VBTLX) +12.0% +3.3% $105.5

  2. Dodge & Cox Income(DODIX) +10.1 +3.6 61.9

  3. PIMCO Total Return Instl(PTTRX) +11.8 +3.6 52.9

  4. Metropolitan West Total Return Bd I(MWTIX) +12.2 +3.3 45.0

  5. Fidelity US Bond Index(FXNAX) +11.9 +3.3 43.7

  6. Fidelity Series Investment Grade Bond(FSIGX) +11.8 +3.7 33.2

  7. American Funds Bond Fund of Amer A(ABNDX) +11.0 +3.0 22.3

  8. JPMorgan Core Bond R6(JCBUX) +12.1 +3.5 19.8

  9. T. Rowe Price New Income(PRCIX) +11.4 +3.1 17.0

  10. Vanguard GNMA Adm(VFIJX) +8.7 +2.6 16.9

  11. BofAML (BAC) $28.31 –0.2% $36.8

  12. GE (GE) 8.56 –0.1 32.4

  13. Apple (AAPL) 227.06 +0.0 30.8

  14. Ford Motor (F) 8.68 –0.7 29.4

  15. Freeport Mcmo (FCX) 8.76 –0.8 21.2

  16. AT&T (T) 37.66 +0.4 21.1

  17. A l t r i a G r o u p ( M O ) 4 2 .17 +1. 3 16. 2

  18. Schlumberger (SLB) 31.80 –0.3 15.9

  19. Microsof t (MSF T ) 137.12 –0.7 15.7

  20. Wells Fargo (WFC) 48.81 –0.8 15.7

  21. Noble Energy (NBL) $19.72 –4.2%

  22. Harley Davids (HOG) 34.11 –3.6

  23. Apache (APA) 21.40 –3.4

  24. Devon Energy (DVN) 21.89 –3.1

  25. Ulta Beauty (ULTA) 242.75 –3.1

  26. Dollar Tree (DLTR) 112.16 –3.1

  27. A b i o m e d ( A B M D ) 16 4. 4 3 –2. 9

  28. Cimarex Energ (XEC) 45.32 –2.8

  29. Helmerich (HP) 37.24 –2.8

  30. Constellation (STZ) 188.74 –2.6

  31. Moody’s (MCO) $208.21 +2.3%

  32. E*TRADE Fina (ETFC) 37.22 +2.3

  33. Gap (GPS) 16.57 +2.1

  34. ConocoPhillip (COP) 54.60 +2.1

  35. Nordstrom (JWN) 33.07 +1.8

  36. Align Techno (ALGN) 184.51 +1.6

  37. Mattel (MAT) 11.20 +1.6

  38. Discovery I (DISCA) 27.38 +1.4

  39. Biogen (BIIB) 226.99 +1.3

  40. Nvidia (NVDA) 184.33 +1.3


+ 5%

0%


  • 5%


–10%

2,700

2,800

2,900

3,000

3,100

3,200

Aug. Sept.

+ 5%

0%


  • 5%


–10%

7,500

8,000

8,500

Aug. Sept.

+ 5%

0%


  • 5%


24,000 –10%

25,000

26,000

27,000

28,000

29,000

Aug. Sept.

2938.79 0.4% 7956.29 0.3% 26478.02 0.4%

Tok yo – 0.2%

Frankfurt +0.7%

London +0.6% Toronto – 0.2%

New York –0.4%

$1 = 107.24

$1.0974 Unemployment Rate

New-home sales

Consumer confidence

Industrial production

Long- and intermediate-term
government bonds

S&P 500 Nasdaq Composite Index Dow Jones industrials

Best performers Worst performers Most active

Sector performance

Bonds

Yield curve

Key rates

Borrowing rate

Crude oil

Corn

Savings rate

yen

10-year Treas.

YESTERDAY

1-YE AR AGO

Fed Funds 2-year Treas.

Currencies Consumer rates Commodities Economy

How stock markets fared yesterday in Asia ... ... in Europe ... and in the Americas.

CLOSE

S&P 500 SECTORS

CLOSE CLOSE 1 YR 5 YRS

TOTAL RETURNASSETSTOTAL
CHANGE CHANGE CHANGE IN MIL. IN BIL.

VOLUME

POWERED BY
What Happened in Stock Markets Yesterday

What Is Happening in Other Markets and the Economy


Major stock market indexes

6 p.m. E.T. 8 10 12 a.m. 2 4 6 a.m. 8 10 12 p.m. 2 4 6 p.m.

Maturity

1-year CDs

30-year fixed mortgages

S&P 500 COMPANIES S&P 500 COMPANIES S&P 500 COMPANIES

Source: Morningstar

1 euro =

The Digest


A day of choppy trading on Wall
Street ended Monday with stocks
broadly lower as the market ex-
tended its losing streak into a
fourth week.
Shares of technology stocks,
consumer goods makers, health

care companies and banks ac-
counted for much of the selling,
which accelerated in the last hour
of trading, erasing modest gains
from midday. Communication
services stocks eked out a slight
gain, bucking the broader market
slide. Crude oil prices edged lower
and bond yields rose.
The market is coming off a
three-week skid after a mostly
discouraging batch of economic
data that stoked investors’ wor-
ries that a slowdown in United
States economic growth could
worsen.
The combination of uncertainty
over the costly trade war between
the United States and China, and
the impeachment inquiry drama
unfolding in Washington, is likely
to continue to drag on the econ-
omy and weigh on markets, said
Tony Roth, chief investment offi-
cer at Wilmington Trust.
“And that’s why the markets are
treading water right now, waiting
to see if another shoe drops,” Mr.
Roth said.
The S&P 500 fell 13.22 points, or
0.4 percent, at 2,938.79. The Dow
Jones industrial average slid 95.70
points, or 0.4 percent, to 26,478.02.
The Nasdaq dropped 26.18 points,
or 0.3 percent, to 7,956.29.
Smaller-company stocks fared
slightly better than the rest of the
market. The Russell 2000 index
slipped 2.91 points, or 0.2 percent,
to 1,497.79.
Bond prices fell, pushing the
yield on the 10-year Treasury to
1.57 percent from 1.53 percent late
Friday.
The benchmark S&P 500 index
began the day lower, picked up
some gains around midday and
then veered back into the red by
late afternoon.
Broadcom led the slide in tech-
nology stocks Monday, dropping
1.9 percent.

Beverage companies fell amid a
sell-off in consumer product mak-
ers. Constellation Brands shares
slid 2.6 percent and PepsiCo stock
fell 1.4 percent. Shares of Coca-
Cola lost 1.2 percent.
Several big drugmakers helped
pull health care sector stocks
lower. Abbott Laboratories stock
gave up 1.2 percent and Merck &
Co. shares slid 0.7 percent.
Financial sector stocks also de-
clined, giving up early gains.
Shares of Progressive dropped 1.5
percent.
Discovery led the gains in the
communication services sector.
The stock rose 1.4 percent.
Fox shares inched up 0.1 per-

cent after the company settled a
dispute with Dish Network over
carriage of Fox’s local TV stations
and cable sports networks. Dish
pulled the broadcast network
from 17 markets in September.
Shares in Dish gained 0.2 percent.
ConocoPhillips stock climbed
2.1 percent after the company
raised its quarterly dividend by 38
percent. It said it would buy back
$3 billion of its stock in 2020.
General Motors shares fell 0.5
percent. The stock has lost nearly
10 percent of its value since con-
tract negotiations with the now
striking United Auto Workers
started to falter.
Benchmark crude oil fell 6 cents
to settle at $52.75 a barrel. Brent
crude oil, the international stand-
ard, slipped 2 cents to close at
$58.35 a barrel. Wholesale gaso-
line was unchanged at $1.57 per
gallon. Heating oil climbed 1 cent
to $1.90 per gallon. Natural gas fell
5 cents to $2.30 per 1,000 cubic
feet.
Gold fell $8.50 to $1,497.70 per
ounce, silver fell 8 cents to $17.46
per ounce and copper rose 1 cent
to $2.57 per pound.
The dollar rose to 107.24 Japa-
nese yen from 106.93 yen on Fri-
day. The euro weakened to $1.0974
from $1.0982.
Major stock indexes in Europe
closed broadly higher. Stocks in
Asia ended mixed. Chinese mar-
kets are set to reopen on Tuesday
after a weeklong break.

Markets Sink Amid Uncertainty


By The Associated Press

The S&P 500 Index


Position of the S&P 500 index at 1-minute intervals on Monday.

Source: Refinitiv THE NEW YORK TIMES

2,960

10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m.

2,940

2,945

2,950

2,955

2,935

Previous close
2,952.01

Consumer Borrowing
Net change in total consumer
debt, excluding mortgages,
seasonally adjusted.
billion

Aug.
July
June
Source: Federal Reserve THE NEW YORK TIMES

5.2
6.7
3.9

+
+
+

Annual pace %
of change

$40

0

+

’18 ’19

10+

20+

STOCKS & BONDS

10-YEAR TREASURY YIELD

1.57%
+0.04%

CRUDE OIL (U.S.)

$52.75
–$0.06

S&P 500 INDEX

–0.45%
2,938.79

DOW JONES INDUSTRIALS

–0.36%
26,478.02

NASDAQ COMPOSITE INDEX

–0.33%
7,956.29

GOLD (N.Y.)

$1,497.70
–$8.50

MARKETS


Hong Kong Market Pulls


London Exchange Offer


Hong Kong’s stock exchange will
no longer proceed with its nearly
$37 billion offer to buy its London
competitor, it announced on Tues-
day morning, in a setback for the
exchange’s long-running effort to
build a closer connection to Euro-
pean markets.
The surprise bid was initially
presented four weeks ago as a
way for the pre-eminent stock
markets of Asia and Europe to join


forces to provide simpler trading
and help bring China, the world’s
second-largest economy, more di-
rectly into global financial mar-
kets. The Hong Kong market said
that if the two exchanges com-
bined, they could offer continuous
trading for 18 hours a day.
The Hong Kong exchange’s par-
ent company, Hong Kong Ex-
changes and Clearing, did not say
why it had retracted its offer. But
the London Stock Exchange
Group had rejected the offer
within two days, saying it was
“simply not credible” and not even
a basis for negotiations. KEITH
BRADSHER

MEDIA


PopSugar Is Acquired


By Group Nine Media


If three’s a trend, then digital me-
dia mergers are officially a thing.
Group Nine Media announced
on Monday that it had bought Pop-
Sugar, a multimedia entity with an
audience of millennial women.
Group Nine — the publisher of
the viral-video site NowThis, the
animal site The Dodo and the
food-drink-and-lifestyle site Thril-
list — declined to disclose the
terms of the deal. Group Nine said
it was an all-stock transaction.
Last week, Vice Media bought
Refinery29 in a mostly stock deal
valued around $400 million.
PopSugar started in 2006 as a
blog run by the husband-and-wife
team of Brian and Lisa Sugar. It
now includes a shopping platform,
a cosmetics line and a festival


business.
The Group Nine chief executive
Ben Lerer said in a statement that
the purchase would help solidify
Group Nine as a “next-generation
media company with significant
scale, deeply loyal and engaged
audiences, multiplatform exper-
tise, and highly diversified reve-
nue.” MARC TRACY AND EDMUND
LEE

WORKPLACE


G.E. Will Freeze Pensions


For 20,000 U.S. Workers


General Electric said on Monday
that it would freeze pension plans
for about 20,000 employees in the
United States with salaried bene-
fits, as the industrial conglomer-
ate makes another big move to cut
debt and reduce its pension deficit
by up to $8 billion.
Since taking over a year ago as
chief executive, Larry Culp has
carved out a number of measures
to streamline the company and


raise cash to pare debt. He has
also chopped the company’s divi-
dend to a penny.
G.E. said it would also freeze
supplementary pension benefits
for about 700 employees in the
United States who became execu-
tives before 2011. G.E.’s pension
plan has been closed to new en-
trants since 2012.
G.E. said the freeze is effective
Jan. 1, 2021, and both moves are
expected to help lower net debt
between $4 billion and $6 billion.
The company said there would
be no change for retirees already
collecting benefits. REUTERS

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