NEW YORK (AFP) – The S&P 500 index fell Friday for the ninth straight day, with anxiety over the close White House race dragging equities markets down heading into the final weekend before the vote.
The fall came despite relatively good news about the health of US jobs markets.
The Labor Department reported Friday that the US economy had added a solid 161,000 new jobs in October while the unemployment rate edged lower to 4.9 percent, a result which analysts said pointed to general all-around health in the economy and suggested the Federal Reserve may raise interest rates next month.
The S&P closed down 0.2 percent at 2,085.18.
The blue-chip Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 0.2 percent to 17,888.28 while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite also lost 0.2 percent to settle at 5,046.37.
Uncertainty about next week s bitterly fought elections has roiled markets ever since the Federal Bureau of Investigation revealed on October 28 that it had uncovered new emails potentially tied to Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton.
Chris Low of FTN Financial said investors were girding themselves for the outcome of Tuesday s vote.
“Last time the market was at this level was back in early July right after the terrible Shanghai sell off,” he told AFP. “Most of the traders I talked to today said they are positioned and are now waiting for Tuesday, and then they ll make a decision where they go from there.”
Ohio-based consumer goods company Procter & Gamble was among the heaviest blue chip losers of the day, finishing down 1.8 percent at $85.08, erasing much of the gains made since reporting stronger third-quarter earnings last week.
Oil majors were also mostly down, with Chevron falling 0.6 repent and Exxon Mobil losing 0.1 percent as crude prices continued to fall.
Pharmaceutical giant Pfizer also finished in positive territory, up 0.4 percent, as did the Israeli generics maker Teva, which gained 2.65 percent and EpiPen producer Mylan, up 2.5 percent. The sector had fallen sharply on Thursday when word of looming enforcement actions for price-fixing dragged stock prices in the sector downward.
Coffee store chain Starbucks finished up 1.9 percent, retreating from gains made earlier in the day after reporting a 23 percent rise in fourth-quarter earnings.