U.S. stocks were mixed Monday amid ongoing worries about the direction of the economy after a gauge of manufacturing activity fell slightly and the government vowed to help some subprime-mortgage holders.
"I think there is concern about overall economic growth, and there is still a lot of concern about financials," said
Major indexes pared losses after Treasury Secretary
The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJI) was recently up 6.9 points at 13, 378.6 with 16 of its 30 components trading ahead.
The S&P 500 (SPX) fell 4.56 points to 1,476.58, while the Nasdaq Composite (RIXF) rose 0.39 points to 2,661.35.
On the New York Stock Exchange, volume topped 524 million and declining stocks outran those advancing about 9 to 7. On the Nasdaq, 839 million shares were exchanged, and declining issues beat those advancing 4 to 3.
The Institute for Supply Management reported its index of business activity dropped to 50.8 in November from 50.9 in October, with a reading above 50 illustrating expansion, and a reading below 50 pointing to a contraction. .
"The 50 reading is great, but it's not enough; directionally we're slowing," said Fitzpatrick.
On the New York Mercantile Exchange, crude-oil futures fell amid ongoing speculation about whether OPEC would raise production quotas later this week. Crude for January delivery declined
The U.S. dollar fell against major currencies, with the dollar index, which measures the greenback against a basket of major currencies, off 0.2%. .
Fed speak
Ahead of the opening bell, Boston Federal Reserve President
Rosengren's talk comes ahead of Tuesday's Fed blackout before the
Regardless of Fed moves, "the economy is going to go through a very rough period" not yet reflected in the stock market, said Joe Battipaglia, a market strategist at Stifel Nicolaus. Listen to Battipaglia.
U.S. stocks gained last week, helped by comments from Federal Reserve officials that hinted at interest-rate cuts as well as a
Active issues
Shares of E-Trade Financial Corp. (ETFC) were down 12.3% after analysts at Bank of America suggested clients sell shares of the brokerage business due to trouble at its bank.
Overseas, European media shares advanced, while losses from miners and banks kept broader markets in check. .
In Asia, markets ended mixed as weaker capital-spending data weighed on industrials. .
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