US markets fell; budget deal drive taper worries

12 Dec 2013 Evaluate

The US markets slipped on Wednesday, suffering their worst losses in more than a month, as investors digested the Washington budget deal that could give the Federal Reserve another reason to scale back its bond-buying program soon. Investors focused on the US budget deal, which gives the Fed another reason to pare its quantitative-easing program at its December 17-18 meeting. Congressional budget negotiators reached a hard-fought deal aimed at avoiding another government shutdown, agreeing on a plan that would restore some money to programs hit by impending across-the-board cuts but trim spending. The deal replaces about $63 billion in automatic spending cuts known as the sequester in fiscal 2014 and 2015 by increasing air travelers’ transportation security fees and cutting federal-worker pensions, among other things. The agreement represents a rare moment of bipartisanship in budget-weary Washington.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 129.60 points or 0.81 percent to 15,843.53, the S&P 500 was down 20.40 points or 1.13 percent to 1,782.22, while Nasdaq dropped 56.68 points or 1.40 percent to 4,003.81.

Indian ADRs closed in red on Wednesday; Tata Motors was down by 1.98%, Infosys was down 0.78%, Dr. Reddy’s Lab was down 0.68%, ICICI Bank was down 0.67% and HDFC Bank was down 0.49%.    

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