Wall Street Ends Tricky Week In A Positive Mood

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2018-03-17 HKT 05:16

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  • US stocks have been pressured this week amid talk of additional US tariffs and as President Donald Trump has shaken up his Cabinet, replacing Rex Tillerson as secretary of state with current CIA Director Mike Pompeo. Photo: AP

    US stocks have been pressured this week amid talk of additional US tariffs and as President Donald Trump has shaken up his Cabinet, replacing Rex Tillerson as secretary of state with current CIA Director Mike Pompeo. Photo: AP

Wall Street stocks finished a difficult week on an upbeat note, rising modestly after largely positive US economic data and a more placid session in terms of national politics.

"The market enjoyed a respite from Washington," said Quincy Krosby, chief market strategist at Prudential Annuities. "The positive data supported the market."

The Dow Jones rose 0.3 percent to 24,946.

The S&P 500 gained 0.2 percent to 2,752, while the Nasdaq finished little changed at 7,481.

US stocks have been pressured this week amid talk of additional US tariffs and as President Donald Trump has shaken up his Cabinet, replacing Rex Tillerson as secretary of state with current CIA Director Mike Pompeo.

White House watchers are girding for more upheaval but there were no bombshell announcements on Friday.

US data showed higher industrial output in February, while a reading of consumer confidence by the University of Michigan hit a 14-year high in March.

Among individual stocks, Adobe Systems rose 3.1 percent after reporting first-quarter revenues of US$2.1 billion, a company record and a 24 percent increase from the year-ago period.

Jeweler Tiffany tumbled 5.1 percent as it projected 2018 earnings below analyst expectations while it beefs up investment in e-commerce and marketing.

Wells Fargo slumped 1.7 percent after The Wall Street Journal reported the Justice Department had expanded a probe of the embattled bank to include its wealth management business.

Dow member Nike shed 0.7 percent following reports a second company executive left the company amid a review of workforce conduct. On Thursday, the company had already announced the surprise departure of top executive Trevor Edwards, who was considered a potential successor to the firm's CEO. (AFP)

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