2023-12-27 15:29:06
Published on: 12/27/2023 – 4:29 p.m.
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The Dow Jones index advanced 0.14%. The S&P 500 fell -0.05% and the Nasdaq -0.09% around 3:15 p.m. GMT.
The broader index is now just half a percentage point from its January 2022 all-time high of 4,796.56 points.
At the end of the last three trading sessions of the year, the Dow Jones should end 2023 up around 13% over the year, the S&P 500 up 24%. As for the Nasdaq, it will post a jump of around 44%, its best annual performance since 2003.
“The day begins with the S&P 500 index less than half a percent from its all-time high following Tuesday’s solid gains,” Schwab analysts noted. “Nevertheless, there is little catalytic element to help him achieve this given the rather thin news from the holiday period,” they lamented.
The bond market, however, continued to relax, with yields on ten-year Treasury bills falling to 3.83% from 3.89% the day before.
“For some, geopolitical anxieties in the Middle East are the cause,” suggested Patrick O’Hare of Briefing.com.
However, oil prices were falling.
On the value side, Microsoft was little affected (-0.21%) by the news of a complaint from the daily New York Times once morest it and that of ChatGPT, the operator of OpenAI.
The newspaper accuses the companies of violating copyright protection by using its articles and the work of its journalists to feed the capabilities of generative artificial intelligence (AI) services.
The securities listed on Wall Street of the Japanese group SoftBank climbed 2.57% following the technology giant announced doubling its stake in the American telecom operator T-Mobile US (+0.15%).
SoftBank obtains 48.8 million T-Mobile US shares worth $7.6 billion, without paying a cent, under a previous agreement, dating back to the merger between T-Mobile and Sprint which was a subsidiary of SoftBank.
The Chinese electric car manufacturer Nio saw its shares slide by almost 2% following the jump the day before (+11%) following the presentation of a new vehicle model.
Within the Dow Jones, Apple shares, in slight decline for five sessions, lost another 0.39%.
“The market has grown so much and so quickly that it is possible that it will experience a period of consolidation,” said Schwab analysts.
The securities listed on Wall Street of the Chinese internet and online gaming giants NetEase (-4.40%) and Tencent (-2.70%) were losing momentum, following having seriously declined on Friday, following changes to regulations affecting online gaming in China.
The biotech Coherus BioSciences soared 22% to $2.66 following the American health authorities (FDA) approved an element of treatment for the possible infectious side effects of chemotherapy.
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