NEW YORK: The S&P 500 closed August with another record Friday, continuing its slow climb even as tensions pick up in Ukraine and after Britain warned of a possible terror attack.
The broad-market gauge pushed back above 2,000, the milestone it closed above for the first time on Tuesday, to finish at 2,003.37, up 6.63 points (0.33 percent) for the day.
The blue-chip Dow Jones Industrial Average added 18.88 points (0.11 percent) at 17,098.45, while the Nasdaq Composite gained 22.58 (0.50 percent) at 4,580.27, its best level in 14 years.
NATO's accusation that Russia had moved 1,000 of its own troops inside Ukraine to help pro-Moscow rebels, and had massed 20,000 on the border, stoked the tensions between Moscow and the West, but had no real impact on markets.
Neither did Britain's raising its terror threat level risk to "severe", with Prime Minister David Cameron saying that the Islamic State jihadist group had set its sights on Europe.
The gains came during the slowest week of the year, volume-wise it was the last week of the summer holiday.
"The lack of activity during the week was a function of some participants being away on vacation, while many others opted to stick to the sidelines ahead of a three-day weekend in the US that could feature new developments on the geopolitical front," said Briefing.com.
A slight but still surprise fall in consumer spending in July did not dent sentiment, coming after a strong June gain.
The fresh data on spending showed no inflationary pressure; the personal consumption expenditures price index, the Federal Reserve's preferred inflation measure, was up 1.6 percent year-on-year, well below the 2.0 percent target.
Technology, financial and energy shares led the way Friday. Home Depot was the best gainer on the Dow, up 1.1 percent, while United Technologies led the losers, down 1.0 percent.
Gas pipeline firm Kinder Morgan rose 1.2 percent, and Goldman Sachs added 1.5 percent. Amid top tech stocks, Microsoft gained 1.2 percent and Facebook put on 1.3 percent.
Communications and networking electronics maker Avago Technologies surged 7.5 percent, boosted by a third-quarter revenue and earnings report that handily surpassed forecasts, and an upbeat outlook for the current quarter.
Cloud computing software firm Veeva Systems beat analysts expectations in its second-quarter earnings, sending its shares up 20.1 percent.
Splunk, another company supplying cloud services to business, jumped 19.1 percent as it surpassed second-quarter revenue forecasts, despite a wider overall loss from a year ago.
Bond prices were flat. The yield on the 10-year US Treasury held at 2.34 percent, and the 30-year at 3.08 percent. Bond prices and yields move inversely.
Comments
Comments are closed.