Stock Market Today: Nasdaq Stocks Lead Fall as Oil Spikes on Iran Attack
U.S. stocks fell on Tuesday after Iran fired more than 100 ballistic missiles at Israel, pushing West Texas Intermediate ( CL=F ) and Brent ( BZ=F ) oil prices to their biggest gains in nearly a year.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) was just below the flat line, while the S&P 500 (^GSPC) was down about 0.6% after both major indexes last month — and quarter — capped fresh record highs. The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) lost more than 1.1%.
Meanwhile, new jobs and manufacturing data opened the new quarter as investors searched for more clues to the future of the Federal Reserve's easing cycle after Fed Chair Jerome Powell indicated the central bank was in no rush to cut rates quickly.
Job openings rose surprisingly in August, adding to the narrative that while the labor market is cooling, it's not slowing down quickly. New data showed 8.04 million job openings at the end of August, up from 7.71 million seen in July.
US manufacturing was steady in September. The Institute for Supply Management (ISM) said its manufacturing PMI was unchanged at 47.2 last month. Despite holding steady, the reading was still weak, as a PMI below 50 indicated a contraction in the manufacturing sector.
Read more: What Fed Rate Cuts Mean for Bank Accounts, CDs, Loans and Credit Cards
The data set investors up for Friday's September jobs report, the highlight of a week full of closely watched economic data. Investors are looking for confirmation that the US economy is cooling rather than collapsing.
In other news, a strike by dockworkers broke out on the East and Gulf coasts, threatening to shut down half of the US ocean shipping. Disruption from large-scale shutdowns could cost the economy billions of dollars a day, raise inflation, put jobs at risk, and reverberate through U.S. politics.
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