Small gains at Wall Street

Capital Market 

Consumer staples sector leads gains

The barely ended in the green, adding 5.78 points, or less than 0.1%, at 25,322.31. The 500 advanced by 2.97 points, or 0.1%, to 2,782. The Index rose by 14.41 points, or 0.2%, to 7,659.93.

The advance for the Dow was enough for its fourth straight positive session. S&P's eight of the index's 11 sectors finished higher, led by gains in consumer-staples shares, while financials and utilities led declines.

The 500 was up 0.3% with just 10 minutes to go, but a late bout of selling left the index with a gain of 0.1%.

Mr. Trump's meeting with Mr. Kim is scheduled to begin in at around 9:00 PM ET and will mark the first time that a sitting U.S. has met with a North Korean leader. The two sides will attempt to come to some sort of agreement on denuclearization that'll likely require security assurances from the U.S. However, the chance of success remains unclear as officials engaged in last-minute talks ahead of the meeting are reportedly struggling to bridge the gaps on some of the most basic issues, according to

Separately, the annual summit over the weekend ended on a contentious note after Trump decided to forego signing a joint statement in response to comments from Canadian Justin Trudeau, who vowed to retaliate against Mr. Trump's recently imposed tariffs on and aluminum imports.

Away from international relations, investors will also begin to focus on central-meetings this week. The Federal Reserve, led by Jerome Powell, is expected to raise interest rates after its two-day meeting that begins Tuesday, while European Central are expected to announce the timing of a reduction of its crisis-era asset-purchase initiative on Thursday.

The ICE U.S. Dollar Index, a measure of the dollar against a half-dozen major currencies, traded less than 0.1% higher. It has climbed by nearly 4% so far this quarter, helping to put pressure on dollar-denominated commodities.

Bullion prices ended higher at Comex on Monday, 11 June 2018. Gold futures finished with a modest gain on Monday, holding to a tight trading range, with an overall a wait-and-see mood taking hold ahead of the much-touted meeting over North Korea's denuclearization and a bevy of major central in the coming week.

August gold tacked on 50 cents to settle at $1,303.20 an ounce, holding between a low of $1,297.80 and high of $1,307. The had managed a small weekly return of about 0.3% last week after challenging the closely watched $1,300 line. July silver settled up 1.3% at $16.952 an ounce.

settled higher on Monday, 11 June 2018 getting a lift from expected supply disruptions in and Venezuela, even after a report of rising crude output from ahead of a much-anticipated meeting later this month.

After swinging between losses and gains, U.S. benchmark July Intermediate crude rose 36 cents, or nearly 0.6%, to settle at $66.10 a barrel on the The commodity logged a weekly loss of 0.1% based on Friday's close for WTI, marking its third weekly fall in a row.

U.S. Treasuries ended Monday on a lower note, pushing yields higher across the curve. The yield on the benchmark 10-yr Treasury note advanced two basis points to 2.96%.

Investors didn't receive any notable economic data on Monday. However, they will receive several reports on Tuesday, including the Index for May (consensus +0.3%), the Treasury Budget for May, and the Index for May.

Powered by Capital Market - Live News

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Tue, June 12 2018. 11:09 IST