Money - International
Wall Street treads water amid trade, corporate worries
Traders work on the floor at the closing bell of the Dow Industrial Average at the New York Stock Exchange on January 10, 2019 in New York. u00e2u20acu201d AFP pic

NEW YORK, March 14 — Wall Street was little moved at the open today as investors brushed aside a bevy of worrisome corporate and trade news.

Shares in the embattled US engineering giant General Electric, aircraft maker Boeing and pharmaceuticals firm Johnson & Johnson, were all lower.

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Meanwhile, Bloomberg reported a "signing summit” between the presidents of the United States and China, originally expected as early as late March, had been pushed back a month as negotiators struggled to resolve their eight-month trade war.

About an hour into the day’s trading, the benchmark Dow Jones Industrial Average was essentially flat at 25,695.29.

The broader S&P 500 and tech-heavy Nasdaq were both also down less than a tenth of a per cent at 2,810.75 and 7,645.91, respectively.

Amid the slew of negative reports, analyst Patrick O’Hare of Briefing.com said investors’ apparent lack of concern was "remarkable.”

"This market, which we said yesterday was acting as if it didn’t have a care in the world, still seems to be clinging to its insouciant manner,” he wrote.

Boeing was down 0.8 per cent a day after the United States became the last major economy to ground the company’s top-selling 737 MAX aircraft following two fatal crashes since October.

Its stock is down about 10 per cent since before Sunday’s fatal crash in Ethiopia.

GE was up 4.3 per cent despite announcing early today it expected negative cash flow of as much as US$2 billion from its core industrial segment this year, setting up another year of lower profits.

Drug maker Johnson & Johnson fell 0.7 per cent a day after a California jury became the latest to award millions in damages to plaintiff who said the company’s baby powder had given her terminal cancer.

Facebook was down 2.1 per cent following New York Times reporting that its data deals with major technology companies were under criminal investigation. — AFP

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