U.S. Stocks Open Lower, on Track for a Down Month on Inflation Fears By Investing.com


© Reuters.

By Liz Moyer

Investing.com — U.S. stocks opened lower on Tuesday amid persistent inflation fears.

At 9:56 AM ET, the fell 333 points, to 1%, while the was down 0.9% and the was down 0.9%.

Stocks were on track to end the month lower despite last week’s rally. The Dow and the S&P were down about 1% on the last day of trading for the month, while the Nasdaq was down about 2%.

Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell was set to meet with President Joe Biden later Tuesday as the central bank continues to try and tame inflation. Biden’s approval ratings are lower than his predecessor and previous presidents at this point in their terms, polling data showed. The price of gasoline over the holiday weekend in the U.S. was above $4.60 a gallon nationally, and above $6 a gallon in some places like California, pinching already strained household budgets as summer travel season kicked off.

measured by the Conference Board was 106.4, higher than the 103.9 expected.

Shares of Unilever PLC ADR (NYSE:) jumped more than 7% on Tuesday after billionaire activist investor Nelson Peltz was named non-executive chairman. His Trian Fund Management has a 1.5% stake in the consumer product company.

Oil prices surged. rose 1.1%, to $118 a barrel, while rose 1.4%, above $119 a barrel. fell 0.5% to $1,848 an ounce.

 

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