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US stocks end firmly in the red Posted: 26 Aug 2013 04:31 PM PDT NEW YORK: US stocks closed lower on Monday after Secretary of State John Kerry warned that the United States would demand "accountability" after an "obscene" chemical weapons attack on Syrian civilians. The Dow Jones Industrial Average shed 64.05 points (0.43 percent) at 14,946.46. The broad-market Standard & Poor's 500 index fell 6.72 (0.40 percent) to 1,656.78 and the tech-rich Nasdaq Composite slipped 0.22 (0.01 percent) to 3,657.57. The markets ended firmly in the red after trading solidly higher for most of the day, but volumes were very low.
The top US diplomat said President Barack Obama would demand accountability for this "moral obscenity." Stocks were under modest pressure after the Commerce Department reported new orders for durable manufactured goods plunged 7.3 percent in July, much sharper than the 5.0 percent drop expected. "Traders continue to grapple with whether the US economy is strong enough to facilitate tapering of asset purchases by the Federal Reserve, which is set to meet in September," said Charles Schwab & Co. said. But a spate of corporate activity sparked investor interest in the last week of summer before the long Labor Day weekend. Shares in biotech giant Amgen soared 7.7 percent after it announced a US$10.4 billion deal to buy cancer-drug specialist Onyx Pharmaceuticals. Amgen sweetened its prior bid by US$4 per share to US$125. Onyx leaped 5.6 percent to US$123.49. Chinese software firm Qihoo 360 Technology jumped 7.8 percent after reporting breakneck growth in second-quarter profits and revenues. "Our PC security products already cover nearly 95 percent of Chinese PC Internet users, and our mobile security solutions cover approximately 70 percent of Chinese smartphone users, making Qihoo the indisputable leader in Internet security in China," Hongyi Zhou, the firm's chairman and chief executive, said in a statement. Home-improvement retailer The Home Depot gained 2.1 percent, the strongest of the 30-stock Dow's four gainers. Procter & Gamble was the laggard, falling 1.8 percent. Microsoft shed 1.7 percent, paring its 7 percent-plus gain Friday on news that chief executive Steve Ballmer will retire in 12 months. -- AFP |
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