Stocks On Wall Street End Mostly Lower

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2018-05-04 HKT 04:36

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  • Analysts say US markets are uneasy over trade policy. Photo: AP

    Analysts say US markets are uneasy over trade policy. Photo: AP

Wall Street stocks finished a volatile session mostly lower on Thursday amid investor worries over interest rates and trade, and as Tesla shares plummeted following a public meltdown by chief Elon Musk.

The Dow Jones finished up a hair at 25,930, recovering after sinking 1.6 percent at a session low.

The S&P 500 dropped 0.2 percent to end the day at 2,629, while the Nasdaq shed 0.2 percent to 7,088.

Analysts have described investor sentiment as broadly bearish as a strong earnings season winds down, with solid results from Amazon, Apple and others having failed to ignite a market rally.

"It is a little perplexing that the market is reacting in that way," said William Lynch, director of investment at Hinsdale Associates. "Earnings have been fantastic."

Analysts say markets are uneasy over trade policy, with investors looking to meetings in Beijing led involving Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and others.

Political turmoil in Washington involving President Donald Trump is another source of unease, along with worries about the Federal Reserve's ongoing drive to hike interest rates.

Fed concerns are expected to be in focus again on Friday when the Labor Department releases April jobs data.

Among individual companies, Tesla Motors sank 5.6 percent after founder and chief Musk responded testily to analyst questions on Wednesday about the need to raise capital and other financial matters, dismissing the queries as "boring" and "not cool" and refusing to answer.

He also said investors should not buy Tesla stock if they are afraid of volatility. "We have no interest in satisfying the desires of day traders. I couldn't care less," Musk said.

JPMorgan Chase called Musk's behaviour as "truly bizarre" and expressed concern about the progress of the company's ambitious plans to escalate production on its Model 3 sedan.

"We are concerned whether the problematic launch of the Model 3 means the vehicle is simply delayed or whether it calls into question its ability to generate 25% gross (profit) margin," the note said. (AFP)

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