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Wall Street continues sell-off at open, Dow -0.4%

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Democrats and Republicans in Washington are in the final two weeks of negotiations before the November 3 presidential election on new spending measures to boost the US economy after the coronavirus pandemic caused grievous damage earlier in the year.
Democrats and Republicans in Washington are in the final two weeks of negotiations before the November 3 presidential election on new spending measures to boost the US economy after the coronavirus pandemic caused grievous damage earlier in the year.
Bloomberg Creative

US stocks opened lower on Tuesday, as traders continued to cash out of the recent rally and worry that the market has hit its peak.

With no economic data forthcoming and few changes in Treasury bond yields, the sell-off came as "markets weigh continued uncertainty regarding President Joe Biden's infrastructure plan, festering Covid-19 cases globally and lingering optimism of robust 2021 earnings and economic prosperity," Charles Schwab analysts said.

About 30 minutes into trading, the benchmark Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 0.4% at 33 925.02,.

The broad-based S&P 500 was 0.3% lower at 4 151.97, while the tech-rich Nasdaq Composite Index dipped 0.2% to 13 886.81.

Last week ended with the Dow and S&P 500 at new records, but trader sentiment changed on Monday with the three major indices closing decisively lower.

Major companies are reporting earnings this week, including body care and cleaning supplies giant Procter & Gamble, which lost 1.3% after reporting solid sales growth in its most recent quarter.

Pharmaceutical giant Johnson & Johnson was up 1.2% after saying it was "very confident" in its Covid-19 vaccine and hopeful for a quick resolution from regulators over its status.

Aerospace firm Boeing fell 2.3% after announcing ahead of its annual meeting Tuesdya that it will lift the company's retirement age for David Calhoun to 70, enabling him to remain as chief executive potentially through April 2028.

Tobacco stocks were mixed after The Wall Street Journal reported the Biden administration was considering a rule to limit nicotine content in cigarettes.

Philip Morris gained 1.1%, while British American Tobacco fell 4.6%.

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