Wall St ends mixed in truncated Black Friday trading

Wall St ends mixed in truncated Black Friday trading

Business

Wall St ends mixed in truncated Black Friday trading

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NEW YORK (Reuters) - U.S. stocks ended little changed in holiday-shortened trading on Friday, with low volume and conviction as investors watched the start of the seasonal shopping season for signs of consumer resiliency.

The S&P 500 (.SPX) closed essentially unchanged, while the Dow (.DJI) eked out a modest gain. The Nasdaq (.IXIC) was dragged slightly lower by weakness in megacap momentum stocks.

All three indexes notched their fourth consecutive weekly gains.

"We had mixed macroeconomic data and the post-Thanksgiving session is only half a day, so there aren't that many participants," said Peter Cardillo, chief market economist at Spartan Capital Securities in New York. "But we're seeing a market that's on the right path of a year-end rally."

Retailers around the world were attempting to attract millions of shoppers, many offering steep "Black Friday" discounts the day after the U.S. Thanksgiving holiday.

"Consumers are being very frugal and while they might spend, they're looking for bargains," Cardillo added. "The higher cost of money is hitting consumers' pocketbook."

A survey by NRF, a U.S. retail trade group, showed U.S. shoppers are planning to spend an average of $875 on holiday purchases this year, an annual increase of about 5%.

Area chart with data from Insider Intelligence shows retail e-commerce sales in the U.S. from Thanksgiving to Cyber Monday in 2017 to 2023, with 2023 as forecast.

S&P Global's advance purchasing managers' index (PMI) showed steady U.S. business activity in November, but private sector employment declined for the first time in almost 3-1/2 years, possibly due to the Federal Reserve's restrictive monetary policy.

Next week's most anticipated data include the Commerce Department's second estimate on third-quarter gross domestic product on Thursday, followed on Friday by its wide-ranging Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) report, which will provide further clues on the extent of the Fed's rate-hike impact.

The focus has increasingly shifted to the likely timing of the U.S. central bank's first rate cut, which will be largely determined by the rate at which inflation cools down toward the Fed's average 2% target.

New and pending home sales, home prices, consumer prices and ISM PMI are also expected next week.

Unofficially, the Dow Jones Industrial Average (.DJI) rose 117.58 points, or 0.33%, to 35,390.61, the S&P 500 (.SPX) gained 2.72 points, or 0.06%, to 4,559.34 and the Nasdaq Composite (.IXIC) dropped 15.00 points, or 0.11%, to 14,250.86.

Nvidia (NVDA.O) dipped after Reuters reported a delay in the launch of the company's new China-focused AI chip designed to comply with U.S. export rules until the first quarter of 2024.

IRobot (IRBT.O) surged in the wake of a report that Amazon (AMZN.O) is set to win unconditional EU antitrust approval for its $1.4 billion acquisition of the robot vacuum maker.

Vista Outdoor (VSTO.N) advanced after Czech gunmaker Colt CZ Group's (CZG.PR) cash-and-stock merger offer worth nearly $1.7 billion.