The Dow and S&P 500 both
slipped on Tuesday, ending their streak of record highs, while oil
prices tumbled after reports ahead of Thursday's OPEC meeting gave a mixed view on whether the cartel would agree to production cuts.
First, the scoreboard:
- Dow: 17,814.9, -3, (-0.02%)
- S&P 500: 2,067, -2.4, (-0.1%)
- Nasdaq: 4,758.2, +3.3, (+0.07%)
And now, the top stories on Tuesday:
1. The big story on Tuesday
was oil. West Texas Intermediate crude futures fell to $74 on Tuesday, a
decline of more than 2% or more than $1.80, after reports from Reuters
early in the day said that officials from Saudi Arabia, Mexico, Russia,
and Venezuela met ahead of Thursday's OPEC meeting with the sides not
agreeing to cut oil production. A report from The Wall Street Journal
said that at Thursday's meeting, Saudi Arabia will "likely side with
calls for the group to adhere more closely to its self-imposed
production ceiling," which the cartel hasn't been firm on since reaching
a 30 million barrel per day production target three years ago. Some on
Wall Street are expecting OPEC to announce a production cut as the
organization tries to combat declining oil prices amid a global supply
glut.
2. The first revision to third quarter GDP
came in way better than expected on Tuesday morning, with the BEA's
revision showing the US economy grew at a 3.9% annualized pace in the
third quarter, better than the 3.5% initial reading and the 3.3% revised
pace that was expected by Wall Street economists.
3. We also got housing data
from the S&P/Case-Shiller home price index, which showed home
prices rose 0.34% in September, the first month-on-month increase since
April. Expectations were for the report to show a 0.3% increase.
4. Yale professor Robert Shiller, the Shiller half of the Case-Shiller index, appeared on CNBC
following the latest release and noted that the futures market is
currently expecting home prices to rise 5% a year over the next two
years, which Shiller said seems reasonable. Shiller also talked a bit
about the stock market, which according to his CAPE Shiller P/E ratio is
historically expensive, but Shiller said he is still invested in the
stock market.
5. We also got consumer confidence data
on Tuesday from The Conference Board, with November's report
disappointing. The report showed consumer confidence fell to 88.7 in
November, down from 94.5 last month, and widely missing expectations for
a 96 reading. The Conference Board's Lynn Franco said following the
report, "Consumer confidence retreated in November, primarily due to
reduced optimism in the short-term outlook."
6. Apple hit a new all-time on Tuesday, and the iPhone maker's market cap crossed the $700 billion threshold for the first time.
7. The latest household debt survey
from the New York Federal Reserve showed that household debt rose to
$11.71 trillion in the third quarter, up from $11.62 trillion the prior
quarter. "Outstanding
household debt, led by increases in auto loans, student loans and
credit card balances, has steadily trended upward in recent quarters,"
said Wilbert van der Klaauw, senior vice president and economist at the
New York Fed. Overall, household debt is below its $12.68 trillion peak
reached in the third quarter of 2008.
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