U.S. stocks closed higher Tuesday, though the gains were not enough to reverse a three-month losing streak, as investors prepared for major events later in the week including the latest Federal Reserve interest rate decision and the release new monthly jobs numbers.
How stocks traded
-
The Dow Jones Industrial Average
DJIA
gained 123.91 points or 0.4%, to close at 33,052.87 Tuesday. It is down 454.63 points or 1.4% this month in the third straight month of decline. The index posted its longest monthly losing streak since the three months ending March 2020. -
The S&P 500
SPX
rose 26.98 points or 0.7% to end at 4,193.80 Tuesday. It is down 94.25 points or 2.2% this month, posting a three-month losing streak, its longest one since March 2020. -
The Nasdaq Composite
COMP
added 61.75 points or 0.5%, to finish at 12,851.24. The index is down 368.08 points or 2.8% this month in its third straight month of decline, posting its longest losing streak since the three months ending June 2022.
What drove markets
The third-quarter earnings-reporting season rumbles on and it was a rocky day for some companies.
Caterpillar Inc.
CAT,
shares dropped 6.7%, a leading Dow decliner and drag on the blue-chip gauge. Even with its third-quarter profit beat, the maker of construction mining equipment had a tepid outlook for the fourth quarter.
The company’s performance was a cause for broader caution, according to Steve Sosnick, chief strategist at Interactive Brokers. It’s just one company, he noted, but it may be reflecting “a pretty negative story about cyclicals right now.”
Pfizer Inc.
PFE,
shares ended flat after a wider-than-expected loss, although the pharmaceutical maker did reaffirm its full-year outlook.
The most widely anticipated earnings event this week happens Thursday after the bell, when Apple Inc.
AAPL,
reports its numbers.
Investors were also focused on the Treasury market. The 10-year Treasury yield
BX:TMUBMUSD10Y
was marginally lower at 4.874% versus 4.875% Monday afternoon.
News on Monday that the U.S. Treasury was planning to borrow less than expected this quarter and would thus have to issue less paper was one factor for bond prices. The Treasury will announce its third-quarter refunding program on Wednesday.
Another factor helping suppress Treasury yields, and therefore possibly helping sentiment in equities, was data showing that manufacturing in China unexpectedly slipped back into contraction in October.
Such signs of a struggling global economy will be part of the Federal Reserve’s calculations as it begins its two-day policy meeting on Tuesday. It is expected to leave its policy interest rates unchanged at a range of 5.25% to 5.5%.
Central bankers and investors had more information Tuesday on labor costs for employers. Worker compensation increased 1.1% during the third quarter, higher than the expected 1%. Labor costs have increased at least 1% for nine straight quarters.
In a hard look at the numbers, Cory Stahle, an economist at Indeed Hiring Lab, said wage growth is slowing.
“When workers with more volatile compensation are removed (those paid on commission, for example) the slowing trend is more clear,” he said. “Today’s data is a mixed bag for Federal Reserve policy makers — things are headed in the right direction, but maybe not at the pace they are hoping for.”
The employment cost report “definitely is not market-friendly, especially ahead of a Fed meeting” where the central bank is focused on the interplay between labor costs and inflation, said Interactive Brokers’s Sosnick.
Also Tuesday, new data showed home prices continuing to rise for the sixth straight month in the country’s 20 biggest metropolitan housing markets, even as mortgage rates inch closer to 8%. The S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller 20-city house-price index increased 1% in August from July. On an annualized basis, prices in the major markets climbed 2.2%.
New numbers on U.S. consumer confidence out Tuesday reached a five-month low, buffeted by the headwinds of rising interest rates, inflation worries and uncertainty about the Israel-Hamas war. The 102.6 read in October slipped from a revised 104.3 in September, according to the Conference Board. Economists polled by The Wall Street Journal were expecting a read of 100.
Companies in focus
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JetBlue Airways Corp.’s stock
JBLU,
-10.48%
closed 10.5% lower after the carrier warned it would post a wider-than-expected fourth-quarter loss, while it missed analyst estimates for its third-quarter loss and revenue. -
BP shares
BP,
-4.62% BP,
-4.58%
dropped 4.6% on Tuesday after the British oil major fell short of analysts’ expectations in posting a 60% drop in its third-quarter profits, following a weak performance from its gas-trading division.
— Jamie Chisholm contributed.
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