Wall Street opened and closed lower Friday, with upbeat durable-goods data failing to negate negative sentiment after another volatile session for Asian markets.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 0.06% to 15303.10 points. The NASDAQ composite index lost 0.01% to 3459.14 points. The S&P 500 index was down 0.05% to 1649.63 points. As of 16:15 New York Time
Orders for long-lasting, big-ticket U.S. goods rose 3.3% in April, led by higher demand for aircraft, military wares and autos. That beat forecasts, as economists had expected a 1.4% gain. U.S. stock index futures pared some losses after the report was released.
On Yesterday, benchmark stock indices retreated as a contraction in Chinese manufacturing offset U.S. housing data, while investors took in Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke’s comments that the unprecedented bond-buying program could be cut in the next few meetings.
For the week, the Dow, S&P 500 and NASDAQ are all on pace to snap four-week winning streaks. Each index reached an all-time or multiyear high during this past week, but then turned tail.
Before the opening, Japan saw another dramatic trading session Friday, swinging more than 3 percent on either side of Thursday’s close. The fall for the Nikkei was triggered by a steep rise in the yen after Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda said stability in the country’s debt markets was “extremely desirable. On Thursday, the Nikkei dropped 7.3%.
On the corporate front, Abercrombie & Fitch slumped 8% after posting a bigger-than-expected first-quarter loss before the open. The teen clothing retailer’s revenue also missed expectations.
On the upside, Pandora surged 11% after its upbeat quarterly report, out late Thursday. The Internet radio company disclosed big gains in mobile revenue.
Procter & Gamble Inc. advanced 6% after the consumer products giant said late Thursday that A.G. Lafley would return as chief executive, replacing the embattled Bob McDonald.
In other markets Friday, European stocks were down, and a better-than-expected rise in German business confidence only had a brief, positive impact on stocks in that country. U.K. markets will be closed Monday for a holiday there.