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While you were sleeping: Dow falls as oil slide continues

UPDATED Diageo buys George Clooney's tequila brand for $US1 billion.

Margreet Dietz
Thu, 22 Jun 2017

Wall Street finished mixed amid a further slide in oil prices, which touched the lowest level in 10 months.

West Texas Intermediate crude for August delivery fell 2.4% to $US42.48 a barrel while Brent hit the lowest level since November.

"There's a sea of negativity," Maxwell Gold, director of investment strategy at ETF Securities, told Bloomberg. "This is much more a story of sentiment weighing on the markets."

A US Energy Information Administration report showing crude inventories fell by a higher-than-expected 2.7 million barrels in the latest week failed to bolster sentiment.

"The market wants proof that OPEC cuts are shifting petroleum balances, and it's not getting it," Anthony Headrick, energy market analyst at CHS Hedging in Inver Grove Heights, Minnesota, told Reuters.

"Crude prices are now on the hunt to find the stress point for the US producers and we're not there yet."

Oil's slump weighed on Wall Street. At the close of trading in New York, the Dow Jones Industrial Average shed 57.11 points, or 0.3%, to 21,410.03.. However, the Nasdaq Composite Index rallied 0.7% to 6233.95 and the Standard & Poor's 500 Index slipped less than 2 points, or 0.06%, to 2435.61.

The Dow declined as slides in shares of Caterpillar and those of DuPont, down 3.2% and 2.1% respectively, outweighed advances in shares of Nike and those of Merck, up 1.8% and 1.5% respectively.

Provident Financial tanks
In Europe, the Stoxx 600 Index finished the session with a 0.2% retreat from the previous close. Germany's DAX Index fell 0.3%, the UK's FTSE 100 Index also eased 0.3% France's CAC40 Index declined 0.4%.

Shares of Provident Financial tanked 17.6% after the sub-prime lender warned that profit at its consumer credit division is expected to drop this year to about half what it was in 2016, citing "the impact of higher operational disruption on collections performance and sales."

Meanwhile, Diageo said it agreed to acquire George Clooney's Casamigos, the fastest growing super-premium tequila brand in the US, for up to $US1 billion to bolster its place in the tequila category. Diageo shares closed 0.7% lower in London.

"It supports our strategy to focus on the high growth super-premium and above segments of the category," Ivan Menezes, Chief Executive of Diageo, said in the statement.

"With the global strength of Diageo we expect to expand the reach of Casamigos to markets beyond the US to capitalise on the significant international potential of the brand."

Casamigos was created in 2013 by founders Clooney, Rande Gerber and Mike Meldman.

"The price looks high," Trevor Stirling, an analyst at Sanford C Bernstein, told Bloomberg. "So much of this depends on their belief in the growth rate of this brand."

(BusinessDesk)

Margreet Dietz
Thu, 22 Jun 2017
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While you were sleeping: Dow falls as oil slide continues
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