Familiar trade-war concerns killed an early rally for stocks
It was a volatile, ugly session on Wall Street today, with the Dow up more than 352 points at its session highs before pivotingsharply lower late in the day. Driving the sudden U-turn was a Bloomberg report that the U.S. was planning on imposing tariffs on all remaining Chinese imports -- about $257 billion worth of goods -- should upcoming talks between President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping fail to resolve the ongoing U.S.-China trade dispute. By its afternoon lows, the Dow was off just over 566 points, and at risk of closing in official correction territory.
Continue reading for more on today's market, including:
This Black Monday stock signal is flashing again.One Red Hat options trader banked millions with a pre-buyout trade.This is the best Dow stock to buy in November.Plus, the auto stock that more than doubled today; Goldman upgrades Ford; and pre-earnings options traders target Facebook stock.The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJI - 24,442.92) closed down 245.4 points, or 1%. Verizon (VZ) led 15 Dow stocks higher with its 1.7% gain, while Boeing (BA) paced the 15 decliners with its 6.6% fall. Earlier in the session, the Dow traded as low as 24,122.23.
The S&P 500 Index (SPX - 2,641.25)fell 17.4 points, or 0.7%, to finish in the red for the eighth time in the last nine days. The Nasdaq Composite (IXIC - 7,050.29) surrendered 116.9 points, or 1.6%, to collect its second consecutive triple-digit drop.
The Cboe Volatility Index (VIX - 24.70) gained 0.5 point, or 2.2%.
Data courtesy of Trade-Alert
Oil prices fell today, keeping pace with steep losses for China's stock market. December-dated crude futures gave back 55 cents, or 0.8%, at $67.04 per barrel.
Gold fell todaythanks to a strengthening dollar and initially strong stock market gains during the first half of the session. The December-dated contract shed $8.20, or 0.7%, to close at $1,227.60 an ounce.