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Stock Market Live Updates: Stocks rally on deals, S&P 500 and Nasdaq have record closes

Follow Yahoo Finance here for up-to-the-minute briefings on the financial markets, breaking news and other topics of interest to investors and traders. Please check back for continuing coverage.

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4:01 p.m. ET: S&P 500 and Nasdaq have record closes

Here’s where the markets settled at the end of Monday’s trading, which was driven heavily by reports of concessions by China on intellectual property reform:

  • S&P 500 (^GSPC): +0.75%, or 23.3 points

  • Dow (^DJI): +0.68%, or 190.72 points

  • Nasdaq (^IXIC): +1.32%, or 112.6 points

  • 10-year Treasury yield (^TNX): -1.2 bp to 1.762%

  • Gold (GC=F): -0.6% to $1,454.80 per ounce

3:00 p.m. ET: Impossible Foods eyes doubling $2 billion valuation

Impossible Foods Inc, maker of the plant-based Impossible Burger, is in talks with investors about a new round of fundraising that could more than double the private company’s $2 billion valuation, Reuters reports.

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1:00 p.m. ET: ‘Turkey Wednesday’ is the ‘Black Friday’ for grocery shopping

Is there a ‘Black Friday’ for buying Turkeys? Placer.ai, an analytics outfit that tracks store traffic, thinks maybe there is. The firm noted recently that grocers see a big traffic boost the day before Thanksgiving as consumers scramble for last-minute dinner fixings:

Noting that “there may not be a bigger day for grocers than the Wednesday before Thanksgiving,” Placer.ai found:

  • For Publix, Wednesday before Thanksgiving marked the highest day for visits nationwide in 2017 and 2018, soaring by nearly 90% above the baseline and besting every other day during the period.

  • Safeway saw visits rise 78.4% and 75.8% above the baseline for the same period beating out every other day.

  • Albertsons spiked 102.2% above in 2017 and 96.6% above in 2018, while Amazon-owned Whole Foods and Giant visits also saw their peaks on this glorious day for groceries.

The full study is here.

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12:58 p.m. ET: Facebook and Twitter users had their data accessed by apps

Hundreds of Facebook and Twitter users had their data improperly accessed, CNBC reports. CNBC reported that the companies will announce the issue Monday, which was brought to them by security researchers who found the software development kit One Audience gave access to data to developers.

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12:30 p.m. ET: How ‘Tim Apple’ manages Trump amid the trade war

Last week, an uproar ensued after President Donald Trump stated (erroneously) that Apple had decided to move some production to the U.S. While the claim was wrong, Apple watchers noted how Tim Cook — who the president once mistakenly called “Tim Apple” — has managed to navigate the U.S.-China trade spat by wringing tariff concessions out of Trump.

Well, according to data from research firm Panjiva, the Trump administration has granted 62.5% of Apple’s requests for tariff exemption on the largest set of tariffed products, known as “List 3.” That’s a far cry from the exemption rate for non-Apple companies of 5.9%. The figures suggest Apple is far more likely to get what it wants from a notoriously impulsive president.

The full story is here.

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12:00 p.m. ET: What’s worse than a divided government? A ‘united’ one

With virtually all of Wall Street fretting election year risk, Goldman Sachs’ David Kostin predicted that S&P 500 companies will see lower earnings next year. His doomsday scenario involves a unified government dominated by one party:

“A unified federal government post-election could prompt investors to assume the tax cut is reversed and lower projected 2021 EPS to $162 (-7% year/year growth), compressing the P/E multiple to 16x consistent with an index level of 2,600,” Kostin wrote.

The idea that government gridlock is actually good for investors has long underpinned Wall Street’s assumptions. With President Donald Trump under rising political pressure, markets are starting to war-game scenarios about what would happen if Democrats recapture both chambers of Congress and the White House.

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11:05 a.m. ET: UBS: 2020 all about politics, then ‘transformation’

Democratic presidential candidates from left, Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J., Rep. Tulsi Gabbard, D-Hawaii, Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., South Bend, Ind., Mayor Pete Buttigieg, Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., former Vice President Joe Biden, Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., former technology executive Andrew Yang and investor Tom Steyer participate in a Democratic presidential primary debate, Wednesday, Nov. 20, 2019, in Atlanta. (AP Photo/John Bazemore)

The Swiss Banking giant expects global growth to edge down to 3.0% in 2020, from 3.1% this year, as the crosswinds of trade, politics and weaker business confidence drags on the world economy.

According to UBS’s chief investment officer Mark Haefele, politics is the dominant theme next year. However, he names some ways investors can “reassert control over their portfolios” independent of outcomes:

• Within equities, we recommend quality and dividends, and choosing

domestic and consumer-focused companies that are likely to provide

more reliable returns than those exposed to trade and business spending.

• In fixed income, we suggest a middle-of-the-road approach given low

yields on the safest debt and the rising credit risks among some high yield

issuers. We favor emerging market sovereign debt, select “crossover”

names in Europe, and sustainable over traditional bonds.

• Elsewhere, we like precious metals over cyclical commodities, expect

US dollar underperformance, and advocate a low beta posture within

alternatives.

Meanwhile, a “decade of transformation” will bring big changes:

“Working-age populations in developed countries will begin to shrink, and a less favorable

political backdrop could emerge for higher-income individuals. We also

expect significant environmentally and technologically led innovations to

disrupt existing norms in a deglobalizing world.

“Overall, we think all this will mean lower returns and higher volatility for

most financial assets than in the past decade. Investors targeting a given

level of return in well-diversified portfolios may therefore need to increase

their allocation to riskier assets such as equities.”

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10:45 a.m. ET: Teva spikes on report of price-fixing settlement

Citing anonymous sources, Bloomberg reports that Teva and a few other generic drugmakers are in talks with the Justice Department to clear up a criminal antitrust probe that accuses them of price-fixing. Under the terms of the agreement, the companies would admit to certain allegations, pay fines and cooperate with officials — but will not be indicted. Teva’s (TEVA) stock is up over 6% in mid-morning trade.

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10:02 a.m. ET: Stocks set new records in Thanksgiving week rally

Merger mania is sending the major benchmarks higher, with the S&P 500 Index and Nasdaq both setting new 2019 highs. U.S.-China trade talks also underpin sentiment.

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10:00 a.m. ET: EBay rallies on deal to sell StubHub

The online auction site’s stock (EBAY) jumped by over 1% in early trading, after it announced a deal to sell StubHub for $4 billion, one of 3 big deals announced early Monday that boosted stocks to new highs. The sale is expected to close by early 2020.

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9:30 a.m. ET: Stocks gain as big deals boost sentiment

Wall Street opened to the upside on Monday, as major deal news converged with a policy move by China that investors interpreted as encouraging to U.S.-China trade talks. The week is shortened by Thanksgiving, so flows are likely to be light.

Here’s where the markets began trading:

  • S&P 500 (^GSPC): +0.35%, or 10.95 points

  • Dow (^DJI): +0.28%, or 79.11 points

  • Nasdaq (^IXIC): +0.64%, or 56.19 points

  • 10-year Treasury yield (^TNX): -0.5 at 1.765%

  • Gold (GC=F): -0.5% to $1,456.10 per ounce

LVMH buying Tiffany & Co. (TIF) for $16 billion and Charles Schwab (SCHW) buying TD Ameritrade (AMTD) for $26 billion helped set the stage for the session. Meanwhile, China tightening its intellectual property laws — partly addressing a major U.S. concern — was also seen as constructive.

According to veteran market watcher Peter Boockvar:

“I still though think it's important from a market perspective to compare what this phase one deal will end up looking like (I think we'll get one) vs the one that was almost inked in May. The one in May was certainly the most comprehensive in all respects and the most stringent in terms of IP protection where the Chinese were actually going to embed it in law. Phase one will likely be a fraction of it, some saying about 60-65% in terms of content with the balance hoped for to be included in phase two which who knows if we'll get next year.”

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