By Alex Eule
| Thursday, June 18
Crawling Back. The Nasdaq
Composite continued its
march higher today. The tech-heavy index rose 0.3% for its fifth consecutive
gain. The Nasdaq has nearly recovered the losses it suffered during last
Thursday's one-day tumble, and it's nearly back to all-time highs.
The S&P
500 also
rose, though just barely, while the Dow
Jones Industrial Average fell 40 points. It was dragged down by weak
days from two financials, American
Express and Goldman
Sachs Group.
The Nasdaq's
strong day came even as a new wave of tech regulation begins to
build. Australia's antitrust regulator said it was looking deeper into Google's planned $2.1 billion acquisition of Fitbit, the maker
of activity tracking devices. The scrutiny adds to a long week of new
investigations into Big Tech. Europe is building a case against Apple's App Store
and its 30% commission rate. The EU is also reportedly looking into Amazon.com's practices
around third-party resellers.
Shares of
Google-parent Alphabet fell 1.3% today, but big tech generally remains
immune from the regulation worries -- for now. Apple, Microsoft, Amazon, and
Facebook -- were all up on the day.
Economic news
continues to put the market's rebound in a precarious spot. The latest round of jobless claims came in at 1.5
million, worse than a forecast for 1.2 million. The figure is still lower
than last week's revised level of 1.57 million claims, marking the 11th
consecutive week of declines.
There was some
good news from a key manufacturing index: The Philadelphia Fed manufacturing
index rose to 27.5,
the first positive reading since February, suggesting improving conditions
in the mid-Atlantic region. A month ago, the index was -43.1. From the Philly
Fed:
The indexes for current
activity, new orders, and shipments returned to positive territory after
negative readings over the past few months. The survey’s price indexes suggest
positive pressure in both the prices of firms’ inputs and manufactured goods.
The survey’s future indexes indicate that respondents expect growth over the
remainder of the year.
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