The actions yielded 0.6 per cent in the week but closed with minor changes on Friday on Wall Street, with developments in the financial sector were offset by falls in the roles of health care.
The Dow Jones industrial average rose this Friday, or 0.2%, to 18.138,38 points, while the S&P 500 closed almost stable as the Nasdaq Composite.
The operators in the parquet flooring new york starred in a session volatile, which started with strong gains, fuelled by the good results presented by JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup and Wells Fargo, although in the final straight is diluted the greater part of the progress.
The discourages end came, in part, by a speech of the president of the Federal Reserve (Fed), Janet Yellen, who considered that a high inflation can help prop up the economic recovery, in the midst of the debate on the next rise in interest rates.
For its part, the european stock exchanges closed upwards on Friday, reassured by good business results.
London climbed 0.5%, Frankfurt increased by 1.6 per cent, Paris gained 1.5%, Madrid has advanced 1.8 per cent and Milan rose 2%.
The index Nikkei of the Tokyo Stock exchange, who began the day Friday with a trend hesitant, it ended up closing on the rise of 0.49% thanks to the major progressions of SoftBank and Fast Retailing (brand Uniqlo).
at The close of the markets, the index Nikkei 225 leading values won 82,13 points to reach the 16.856,37 points.
The price of production in China increased in September by 0.1 per cent compared with the same month of 2015, the first rise registered in almost five years, reported by the Statistical Institute in Beijing.
analysts, who had forecast another slight decline, interpreted the rise as a sign that the situation in china is stabilizing.
The consumer price index increased in September at 1.9 percent, so that inflation in China remains significantly below the official target of three percent.
The chinese economy grew in the first half of the year 6.7 per cent, the expansion is more modest registered since the global financial crisis of seven years ago.
No comments:
Post a Comment