BCN-07 US stocks rise for 4th straight day on trade deal hopes

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ZCZC

BCN-07

US-STOCKS-MARKETS

US stocks rise for 4th straight day on trade deal hopes

NEW YORK, Jan 19, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – Wall Street stocks rose for the fourth
straight session Friday, closing out a strong week on optimism over US-China
trade talks, despite sharp drops in Netflix and Tesla Motors.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average climbed 1.4 percent to 24,706.35. The
blue-chip index has risen more than 13 percent since December 24.

The broad-based S&P 500 gained 1.3 percent to 2,670.71, while the tech-
rich Nasdaq Composite Index advanced 1.0 percent to 7,157.23.

The closes marked the fourth straight weekly gains for the Dow and S&P and
the third for the Nasdaq.

Analysts said the gains reflected a continuation of the optimism following
a report on Thursday that the United States was considering lifting tariffs
on China as a step to win a broader trade agreement.

After a bruising December, US stocks have been in rally mode in early 2019
amid optimism on trade and relief at Federal Reserve commentary suggesting a
cautious approach to further interest rate hikes.

There’s “definitely rising optimism” of a trade deal, said LBBW’s Karl
Haeling.

“There are kind of smoke signals and when there is smoke there is fire,”
Haeling said. “It seems that Trump sees the weakening of the economy and the
shutdown situation. He seems to be doing something to get a win here.”

Shares of US companies with significant China operations gained, including
Dow member Boeing, Caterpillar and Nike.

The positive tone on the China talks also helped Tiffany, which jumped 5.4
percent despite releasing lackluster holiday sales figures.

“The health of the Chinese consumer is integral to Tiffany’s financial
performance,” said a note from Briefing.com. “Therefore, any progress made
towards a resolution on trade with China would represent a significant
positive development for the company and its stock.

But Tesla Motors dived 13 percent after the electric car maker announced
plans to cut seven percent of its workforce and forecast lean profits.

Netflix fell 4.0 percent as its profits topped analyst expectations but
analysts worried that subscriber growth was slowing.

BSS/AFP/HR/0945