US stocks end higher

Wall Street ended the month with a modest advance today as a turnaround in personal spending and a flurry of acquisition activity reassured investors worried about a faltering economy.

Wall Street ended the month with a modest advance today as a turnaround in personal spending and a flurry of acquisition activity reassured investors worried about a faltering economy.

According to preliminary calculations, the Dow Jones industrial average rose 37.30, or 0.36%, to 10,440.07.

The previous session, the Dow climbed almost 173 points, its biggest one-day leap since late April.

Broader stock indicators were also higher. The Standard & Poor’s 500 index was up 8.60, or 0.72%, at 1,207.01, and the Nasdaq composite index surged 30.42, or 1.46 percent, to 2,120.30.

News that spending rose 0.5% in September – reversing a 0.5% August decline - came as another sign of the economy’s resilience following hurricanes Katrina and Rita.

Last week, the Commerce Department reported better-than-expected gross domestic product growth for the July-September quarter.

While the upbeat spending data bolstered the retail and technology sectors, Steven Goldman, chief market strategist at Weeden & Co., also linked today’s rally to a broad recovery from last week’s lows and typical end-of-the-month trading as hedge and mutual funds try to boost returns.

He also cited strong gains in the European markets.

“Basically we had market sentiment get a bit too one-sided,” Goldman said about recent volatility on Wall Street.

“Stocks were getting in place to rebound.”

more courts articles

Micah Richards ‘grappled’ with man accused of headbutting Roy Keane, court told Micah Richards ‘grappled’ with man accused of headbutting Roy Keane, court told
Roy Keane ‘in shock’ after being ‘headbutted’ through doors, court told Roy Keane ‘in shock’ after being ‘headbutted’ through doors, court told
Roy Keane ‘in shock’ after being ‘headbutted’ through doors, court told Roy Keane ‘in shock’ after being ‘headbutted’ through doors, court told

More in this section

Sir Anthony O'Reilly Colin Sheridan: Larger-than-life O’Reilly left his mark in business circles
Currys' financials Currys shares jump on trading update a month after retailer rejected unwanted takeover offer
Joe Biden Biden increases tariffs on Chinese imports of electric cars and chips
IE logo
Devices


UNLIMITED ACCESS TO THE IRISH EXAMINER FOR TEAMS AND ORGANISATIONS
FIND OUT MORE

The Business Hub
Newsletter

News and analysis on business, money and jobs from Munster and beyond by our expert team of business writers.

Sign up
ie logo
Puzzles Logo

Play digital puzzles like crosswords, sudoku and a variety of word games including the popular Word Wheel

Lunchtime News
Newsletter

Keep up with the stories of the day with our lunchtime news wrap.

Sign up
Cookie Policy Privacy Policy Brand Safety FAQ Help Contact Us Terms and Conditions

© Examiner Echo Group Limited