US stock markets made up for the most part of initial losses
US stock markets made up for the most part of initial losses in late trading. As in the past two days, buyers came onto the market as the Dow Jones Industrial approached the 34,500 mark on its way down. In the end, the leading index recorded a moderate minus of 0.18 percent to 34,751.32 points. Stock traders spoke of a lethargic trade.
Even before the start of the stock market, economic data had surprised positively. This was especially true for US retail sales. Contrary to analyst expectations, revenues rose in August. In addition, there was a regional sentiment indicator for industry from the Philadelphia region, which rose for the first time in several months. The broad S&P 500 closed 0.16 percent lower at 4473.75 meters. The Nasdaq 100, which is dominated by technology and biotech stocks, ended trading with a plus of 0.08 percent to 15,515.91 points.
Good economic data are currently not necessarily positive from the point of view of equity investors. Because they could induce the US Federal Reserve to tighten the monetary policy reins sooner rather than later by curbing the billion dollar securities purchases. In US bond trading, the yields rose after the good economic data. Networking specialist Cisco's papers fell 0.4 percent after gaining in early trading. Several analysts were optimistic about Cisco. The US bank
JPMorgan, for example, put the papers on a recommendation list.
Credit Suisse upgraded Cisco from "Neutral" to "Outperform". However, Cisco had already grown by almost 30 percent since the beginning of the year. Casino operator courses were under selling pressure for the third day in a row. China wants to keep the companies and their activities in the Asian gaming metropolis Macau under closer observation. "This has raised concerns about the future of Macau as the gambling epicenter," wrote investment bank Jefferies. Las Vegas Sands shares fell 1.3 percent and Wynn Resorts fell 2.4 percent.
The shares of the meat substitute manufacturer Beyond Meat lost 2.3 percent after the investment bank Piper Sandler recommended the papers for sale. The solid economic data put pressure on prices in bond trading. The futures contract for ten-year paper (T-Note-Future) fell by 0.29 percent to 133.00 points. The yield on ten-year paper rose to 1.34 percent. The euro rebounded from previous losses in late US trading, closing at $ 1.1767. The European Central Bank (
ECB) had previously set the reference rate at 1.1763 (Wednesday: 1.1824) US dollars. The dollar had thus cost 0.8501 (0.8457) euros.