US stocks end losing streak

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US stocks closed higher on Wednesday, as the Dow Jones Industrial Average ended an eight-day losing streak and markets regained some ground lost in Tuesday’s brutal sell-off.

The Dow average of 30 blue-chip stocks rose 29.82 points (0.25 per cent) to close at 11,896.44.

The broader S&P 500 climbed 6.29 points (0.50 per cent) to 1,260.34, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite rallied 23.83 points (0.89 per cent) to 2,693.07.

All three indices had plunged more than two per cent on Tuesday amid worries about economic weakness in the United States and Europe.

Shares of MasterCard surged 13.4 per cent on Wednesday after the credit-card giant reported second-quarter earnings that comfortably beat Wall Street forecasts.

Technology stocks also helped lift the market, with chipmaker Intel gaining 1.4 per cent and internet search giant Google rising 1.5 per cent.

Energy stocks fell as the price of oil dropped to one-month lows on the back of weak economic data. ExxonMobil lost 0.2 per cent and Chevron tumbled 0.7 per cent.

Wednesday’s gains came despite a pair of reports which suggested that the US economy was stalling.

Payrolls firm ADP reported that a net 114,000 jobs were created by private, non-farm businesses in the United States in July, fewer than in June, but better than analysts had expected.

And the Institute for Supply Management said its index of non-manufacturing activity fell to 52.7 last month, indicating that the giant US service sector grew at a snail’s pace in July. A level of 50 indicates no growth.

“Economic numbers have been poor for most of the last week and a half and today was no difference,” said Michael James, senior equity trader with Wedbush Morgan Securities.

Bond prices rose. The yield on the 10-year Treasury dropped to 2.60 per cent from 2.62 per cent late Monday, while that on the 30-year bond fell to 3.87 per cent from 3.92 per cent.

Bond prices and yields move in opposite directions.

AAP