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The S&P 500 tiptoed to a record close on Thursday, with stocks ending largely unchanged on signs that companies are now beginning to deal with tariff-induced inflation.
Rate-sensitive stocks came under sharp selling pressure but still ended off the session's worst levels.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average ended 11.01 points lower, down less than 0.1%, at 44,911.26, according to FactSet.
The S&P 500 finished 1.96 point higher, less than 0.1%, logging a fresh record close of 6,468.54.
The Nasdaq Composite Index closed 2.47 points lower, less than 0.1%, at 21,710.67.
The Russell 2000 index of small-cap stocks shed 1.2%.
The cost of wholesale goods and services — where rising inflation tends to show up first — posted the most significant increase in three years in July, possibly heralding a sizable acceleration in price hikes tied to U.S. tariffs.
The producer price index jumped 0.9% last month after no change in June, the government said Thursday.
Some, but not all, of the increase occurred in goods directly affected by tariffs. Food was the biggest contributor to higher wholesale prices
The yearly rate of wholesale inflation climbed to 3.3% from 2.3%, a five-month high.
Another gauge, known as the core rate, which is seen as a more stable measure of wholesale inflation, rose 0.6% in July.
The 12-month increase in the core rate moved up to 2.8% from 2.5%.
The wholesale report doesn’t capture the cost of imports as well as the consumer price index, but the CPI also showed a sharper increase in July.
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