The stock market experienced another late-day decline, dragging the major indexes into negative territory. The Dow, S&P 500 Index, and Nasdaq got off to strong starts fueled by tech and retail stocks, while investors also reacted to this morning's fourth-quarter GDP update. But a sharp drop in oil prices resulted in major weakness from the energy sector, and the selling pressure only intensified in the final hours of trading. Against this backdrop, the Dow and S&P both snapped their longest monthly winning streaks in decades -- and logged their biggest monthly losses since January 2016 -- while the Nasdaq suffered its first monthly decline in since June.
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The S&P 500 Index (SPX - 2,713.83) fell 30.5 points, or 1.1%, and the Nasdaq Composite (IXIC - 7,273.01) fell 57.3 points, or 0.8%. The SPX lost 3.9% for the month, and the Nasdaq gave back 1.9%.
The Cboe Volatility Index (VIX -19.85) added 1.3 points, or 6.8%, bringing its monthly advance to 46.6% -- its best month since August 2015.
Data courtesy of Trade-Alert
April-dated crude futures fell $1.37, or 2.2%, to end at $61.64 per barrel, after domestic crude inventories rose more than expected. Oil dropped 4.8% for the month -- its first monthly decline since August.
Gold futures for April delivery fell 70 cents today to close at $1,317.90 per ounce. The metal fell 1.6% this month.