US Stocks End Lower After Summit Cancelled

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2018-05-25 HKT 05:13

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  • Stocks fells after President Trump called off the North Korea meeting, citing Pyongyang's purported "open hostility. Photo: AP

    Stocks fells after President Trump called off the North Korea meeting, citing Pyongyang's purported "open hostility. Photo: AP

A volatile day on Wall Street saw US stocks swing to a negative finish after US President Donald Trump cancelled a planned June summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.

The major indices rebounded off the day's lows but were still negative due to falling oil prices and persistent trade jitters after Trump late on Wednesday announced a national security investigation into auto imports.

Trump called off the North Korea meeting, citing Pyongyang's purported "open hostility."

The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 0.3 percent to close at 24,811.76 while the S&P gave up 0.2 percent to settle at 2,727.76.

The tech-heavy Nasdaq was essentially flat at 7,424.43.

"There are two cases on which the market is really focused. It's trade negotiations and the geopolitical situation with North Korea," Tom Cahill of Ventura Wealth Management told AFP.

"Donald Trump just backed down on both."

After suffering an initial shock, stocks recovered much of their losses. But Cahill said each day's lot of worrisome trade headlines could have a cumulative effect on the market.

"These conflicts are not dramatic one by one," he said. "But their accumulation will eventually undermine business confidence and growth."

The word of the national security auto investigation, which could result in fresh tariffs on foreign-made cars and auto parts, sent US automakers higher.

General Motors added 1.4 percent while Ford rose 1.5 percent.

But falling oil prices meant US supermajors Exxon Mobil and Chevron had a bad day, falling 2.3 percent and 1.7 percent, respectively.

Meanwhile, financial stocks lagged behind the market, with investors relieved the Federal Reserve seems less likely to accelerate the pace of interest rate increases.

Investment bank Goldman Sachs fell 0.7 percent and JP Morgan Chase sank 1.1 percent. (AFP)

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