US Stocks Drops, Still Post Monthly Gains
US stocks closed lower on Friday, with the S&P 500 and the Dow Jones down 0.4% and the Nasdaq tumbling 1.3%, as higher Treasury yields and a firmer dollar weighed on risk appetite after President Trump nominated Kevin Warsh to succeed Fed Chair Powell. Markets viewed the pick as reinforcing a more disciplined and cautious easing trajectory, pushing long-end yields higher and pressuring rate-sensitive after January’s strong rally. Materials, technology and communication services underperformed, while healthcare outperformed. Apple rose 0.5% despite solid earnings and resilient iPhone sales, as stretched valuations capped upside, while Visa slipped 2.9% after a largely priced-in earnings beat. ExxonMobil declined 0.7%, Chevron rose 3.3% on a profit beat, and American Express dropped 1.8% following an earnings miss, while Verizon surged 11.8% on stronger guidance. Despite the pullback, the S&P 500 gained 1.2% in January, with the Dow up 1.6% and the Nasdaq advancing 1.1%.
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S&P 500 — US Large Cap Index
FTSE 100 — UK Blue Chips
Euro Stoxx 50 — Eurozone Leaders
DAX 40 — German Equities
CAC 40 — French Market Index
Nikkei 225 — Japan Benchmark
Hang Seng — Hong Kong Index
Shanghai Composite — China Mainland
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TSX Composite — Canada Index
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KOSPI — South Korea Index
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JSE Top 40 — South Africa Index
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