US stocks end mixed | IFCM Tanzania
Logo IFCMarkets
NetTradeX for IFC Markets
Trading App
IFC Markets Online CFD Broker

US stocks end mixed - 8.8.2019

Dollar rise slowed as Evans says more easing may be needed

US stock indexes closed mixed on Wednesday erasing earlier losses as bond yields continued declining. The S&P 500 added 0.1% to 2883.98. The Dow Jones industrial average however slipped 0.1% to 26007.07. Nasdaq composite index gained 0.4% to 7862.83. The dollar strengthening decelerated as Chicago Fed President Charles Evans expressed support for another quarter-point interest rate cut this year. The live dollar index data show the ICE US Dollar index, a measure of the dollar’s strength against a basket of six rival currencies, inched up 0.03% to 97.62 but is lower currently. Stock index futures point to higher market openings today

DAX 30 leads European indexes rebound

European stocks rebounded on Wednesday led by travel and leisure stocks. GBP/USD joined EUR/USD’s continued slide yesterday with both pairs rising currently. The Stoxx Europe 600 edged up 0.2%. Germany’s DAX 30 rose 0.7% to 12189.04 despite data showed German industrial output fell at a far steeper pace than expected in June. France’s CAC 40 gained 0.6% and UK’s FTSE 100 added 0.4% to 7198.7.

DE30 tests MA(200)    08/08/2019 Market Overview IFC Markets chart

Shanghai Composite leads Asian indexes gains

Asian stock indices recovered today after China’s central bank set the yuan’s midpoint at its weakest level since 2008. Nikkei managed to end 0.4% higher at 20593.35 with yen slowing its climb against the dollar. Chinese stocks are rising after data showed China's exports rose unexpectedly in July while People’s Bank of China set the yuan’s reference point at 7.0039 per dollar: the Shanghai Composite Index is up 0.9% and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index is 0.5% higher. Australia’s All Ordinaries Index extended its gains 0.8% despite Australian dollar’s resumed climb against the greenback.

Brent falls after surprise US crude inventories build

Brent futures prices are higher today. Prices slumped yesterday after the Energy Information Administration report US crude inventories rose unexpectedly 2.4 million barrels last week, first in 8 weeks while gasoline inventories rose by 4.4 million. October Brent crude tumbled 4.6% to $56.23 a barrel on Wednesday.

News

Copper Price Analysis

Copper Price Analysis

Copper, often referred to as the metal of civilization, plays a pivotal role in various industries, including construction,...

30/10/2025
Soybeans Price Analysis - Trends and Drivers

Soybeans Price Analysis - Trends and Drivers

Soybeans have experienced significant price fluctuations over the past decades. From the 1970s through the early 2000s, soybean...

24/10/2025
Warren Buffett Adds $521 Million to Chevron

Warren Buffett Adds $521 Million to Chevron

Berkshire Hathaway made one of its biggest stock purchases last quarter, adding nearly $521 million worth of Chevron (CVX)...

23/10/2025
BTCUSD Analysis: Trump Walked Back Massive Tariffs on China

BTCUSD Analysis: Trump Walked Back Massive Tariffs on China

On Monday, Bitcoin stabilized at $115,000 after last week's sharp selloff, as Trump backed down on his threat to impose massive...

13/10/2025
Oil Prices Stay Weak After OPEC+ Approves Modest Output Rise

Oil Prices Stay Weak After OPEC+ Approves Modest Output Rise

Oil prices ended the week on shaky ground after OPEC+ approved a modest production increase of 137,000 bpd, signaling cautious...

10/10/2025
Slowing U.S. Growth Put Spotlight on CPI as EURUSD

Slowing U.S. Growth Put Spotlight on CPI as EURUSD

Weak PMI data, softening jobs market, and political brouhaha raise the stakes for October’s inflation print. The U.S. government...

9/10/2025

Explore our
Trading Conditions

  • Spreads from 0.0 pip
  • 30,000+ Trading Instruments
  • Stop Out Level - Only 10%

Ready to Trade?

See Also

Go Pro
  • Spreads from 0.1 pips
  • No requotes
  • Market execution
Open Pro Account
go pro trade
Close support
Call to WhatsApp Call to telegram Call Back