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U.S. stocks ended lower on Monday as some traders took profits before the end of the year, dimming hopes for the “Santa Claus rally.”
The Santa rally speaks to a seasonal tendency for the S&P 500 to rise over the last five trading days of a calendar year and the first two trading days of the new year.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average ended roughly 1% lower for back-to-back losses, according to preliminary closing data from FactSet.
The S&P 500 closed 1.1% lower for its third straight daily loss.
The Nasdaq Composite finished about 1.2% lower, also booking its third straight daily loss.
Oilfield services firm Baker Hughes said Friday its weekly U.S. rig count was at 589 rigs for a third consecutive week and is down 33 rigs or 5.3% from 622 rigs last December.
The number of rigs seeking crude oil was also unchanged at 483 rigs, down 17 from 500 a year earlier. The number of rigs drilling for natural gas remained at 102 for the week, down 18 rigs from 120 the previous year.
Texas bucked the national trend, dropping one rig for 284 rigs active across the state, down 25 from 309 last year. New Mexico was unchanged at 103 rigs. Texas was the only major producing state to decline while North Dakota (1) was the only producing state to see an increase.
The Permian Basin remained unchanged at 304 rigs for the week, down five rigs from 309 last year.
Eddy County, New Mexico, remains the most active county in the Permian Basin, hosting 54 rigs for a third consecutive week. Lea County, New Mexico, remains in second place with 46 rigs, down one for the week.
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