(New York) The New York Stock Exchange traded in dispersed order Monday morning after records reached last week and at the start of a week rich in indicators.
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Around 10:05 am, the Dow Jones Industrial Average, which includes 30 flagship Wall Street stocks, fell 0.38% to 34,301.66 points.
The technology-heavy NASDAQ took 0.66% to 14,455.47 points and was heading towards a new closing high.
The S&P 500 extended index was stable at 4280.60 points.
“The market remains focused on the timetable for tightening monetary policies around the world, but seems to accept without batting an eyelid the recent signs of an increase in the pace of inflation,” note analysts at Charles Schwab.
Wall Street is preparing for Thursday’s release of the US Manufacturing Activity Index for June (ISM) and the US monthly employment and unemployment rate report on Friday.
Market players will also closely follow the continuation of negotiations around the infrastructure investment plan desired by President Joe Biden.
After a preliminary agreement between Republican and Democratic senators last week, the project still has to go through several legislative steps before possible enactment.
Among the values of the day, Boeing was down 2.79%. In a letter to the aeronautics giant, the US agency overseeing air transport (FAA) said it was concerned about technical problems encountered by the long haul 777X, which compromises the putting into service of the device.
“The FAA will not approve any aircraft that do not meet our safety and certification criteria,” the agency said.
Johnson & Johnson gained 0.30%. A deal with New York State was announced on Saturday to end an opioid-related lawsuit, which includes a payment of $ 230 million. The laboratory also announced that it had stopped selling these substances in the United States, which have killed more than half a million people in the country since 1999.
On the bond market, the 10-year rate on US debt fell to 1.48%, from 1.54% on Friday night.
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