ECB Stimulus, Trade Hopes Lift US Stocks

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2019-09-13 HKT 04:38

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  • Wall Street closed higher on the back of European Central Bank stimulus measures and renewed hopes for Sino-US trade talks. File photo: AP

    Wall Street closed higher on the back of European Central Bank stimulus measures and renewed hopes for Sino-US trade talks. File photo: AP

US stocks finished higher on Thursday after the European Central Bank announced new stimulus measures and as investors greeted further signs of moderation in the US-China trade war.

The ECB moves bolstered expectations the US Federal Reserve will take another step to protect economic growth next week with a second interest rate cut.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average ended the day at 27,182, up 0.2 percent, increasing for the seventh straight session.

The S&P 500 climbed 0.3 percent to close at 3,009, while the Nasdaq Composite Index also advanced 0.3 percent to 8,194.

Markets were in positive territory virtually the entire day but pulled back from session highs in the last half hour of trading after flirting with records.

"We're swinging back into normal territory with the focus back on trade and monetary policy," said Art Hogan, chief market strategist at National Securities.

In a highly-anticipated move, the ECB cut a key interest rate deeper into negative territory, and announced new net purchases of government and corporate debt and support for struggling banks as outgoing chief Mario Draghi urged eurozone governments to spend more.

The ECB announcement came after President Trump pushed back a round of tariff increases on China from October 1 to October 15 after Beijing agreed to spare some US products from its retaliation.

US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said trade negotiators are seeking "meaningful progress" with China in October talks.

Previous rounds of talks have failed to yield agreement.

Among individual companies, Oracle slumped 4.3 percent as quarterly revenues lagged analyst estimates and the company said one of its two chief executive officers, Mark Hurd, was taking a medical leave of absence. (AFP)

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