Dow falls after commerce secretary says us, china still far away on trade deal

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The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell on Thursday amid lingering concern over U.S.-China trade negotiations. The 30-stock index dipped 22.38 points to close at 24,553.24, led by losses in


Merck and Pfizer. The eked out a 0.1 percent gain to close at 2,642.33 as chip stocks lifted the technology sector. The Nasdaq Composite outperformed, rising 0.68 percent to 7,073.46. Intel


climbed nearly 4 percent while Lam Research surged 14 percent. The VanEck Vectors Semiconductor ETF (SMH), which tracks chip stocks, rose 5.8 percent to notch its biggest one-day gain since


March 23, 2009. (Intel would later fall 8 percent in after-hours trading following the release of its quarterly earnings). Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross said earlier on Thursday that China


and the U.S. were not close to striking a trade deal. Ross told CNBC's "Squawk Box" that the U.S. is "miles and miles" from a trade deal with China, adding the two


countries have "lots and lots of issues." His comments come as China and the U.S. try to strike a trade deal before the beginning of March. If they don't, additional U.S.


tariffs on Chinese goods will come into effect. The two countries have been engaged in a trade war since last year. Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. Michael Nagle |


Bloomberg | Getty Images "This clearly remains the largest unresolved geopolitical force for the US equity market," said Michael Shaoul, chairman and CEO of Marketfield Asset


Management, in a note. "Most of the market moves this week were driven by competing headlines regarding the US/China trade dispute." Solid earnings reports helped lessen the blow


from Ross' comments on Thursday. American Airlines and JetBlue were among the companies that posted better-than-expected earnings. Texas Instruments also topped estimates. American


Airlines and JetBlue both rose more than 5 percent. Texas Instruments surged 6.9 percent. The earnings season continues later on Thursday, with Intel and Starbucks among the companies


scheduled to report after the close. "We are early in the fourth-quarter reporting season. Results are coming, early on, largely as expected. We're still continuing to see


reasonable revenue growth and double-digit earnings growth," said Bill Northey, senior investment director at U.S. Bank Wealth Management. But "there has been a notable erosion to


2019 full-year estimates. That's consistent with the growing, but slowing, thesis in economic growth." Investors also kept an eye on Washington as the U.S. government shutdown


entered its 34th straight day. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said Wednesday that Democrats would block President Donald Trump from delivering his State of the Union address until the government


reopened — an announcement that Trump complied with. James Gorman, CEO at Morgan Stanley, said it will be "extremely negative" for the U.S. if the shutdown continues for much


longer. "If it goes on through months of this year, it's going to have an extremely damaging effect" on the U.S. economy, he said. For now, the U.S. labor market appears to be


holding up well. Weekly jobless claims fell to 199,000 last week, their lowest in 49 years. _—CNBC's __Alexandra Gibbs__ contributed to this report._