That did not happen something unexpected around Greece Tuesday and thus contributed good economic data in the US slightly lighter mood on the stock exchanges in New York on Tuesday.
S & amp; P / Case-Shiller housing price index rose 1.1 percent in April and ended at 170.01. This means that the recovery in the past year was 4.9 percent.
Chicago PMI did not cross the 50 level again, but rose to 49.4. Consumer confidence for June rose from 94.6 to 101.4.
Despite a heavy day on the stock exchanges in Europe, according to MarketWatch left behind the worst quarter in three years, rose technology heavy Nasdaq index ending up 0.7 percent to 4,993.10.
Dow Jones rose 0.3 percent to 17,648.94 while the S & amp; P 500 rose 0.39 percent to 2,064.59.
S & amp; P 500 stopped thus downturn after testing its 200-day moving average at 2050 levels for two consecutive days, while the Dow Jones broken its 200-day moving average at 17,700 level.
For each share that fell on the NYSE was nearly two stocks rose. On Nasdaq rose two shares for every share that fell.
Oil prices rose 96 cents to $ 59.29 on the commodity exchange in New York and ended according to MarketWatch first half with an increase of 11 percent, while gold prices fell to $ 1172 and the lowest since March.
ExxonMobil rose 0.46 percent on higher oil prices.
Seven of the ten most traded shares on Nasdaq rose, and it was only Facebook, Microsoft and Google ended slightly in the red. Apple was today’s most actively traded and ended up 0.72 percent.
On the NYSE rose to six of the ten most traded shares, with JP Morgan up 0.83 percent and today’s most actively traded. Bank of America followed heels with a rise of 0.77 percent and Citigroup rose 0.66 percent. Wells Fargo rose 0.32 percent.
Twitter became today’s winner among the most actively traded and ended up 5.88 percent.
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