US stocks end at records as Kraft Heinz, Unilever surge

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NEW YORK: US stocks edged to fresh records Friday, shrugging off early weakness as news that Kraft Heinz plans to seek a takeover of Unilever sent shares of both companies surging.

All three major indices again ended at all-time highs, albeit very narrowly in the case of the Dow and S&P 500.

The Dow and S&P 500 spent much of the day in negative territory, with analysts pointing to profit-taking and the need for the market to digest earlier gains.

But a late surge lifted them into positive territory, amid merger speculation in multiple sectors.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average finished barely higher than the record close Thursday to end the day at 20,624.05, up 0.02 percent.

The broad-based S&P 500 added 0.2 percent at 2,351.16, while the tech-rich Nasdaq Composite Index rose 0.4 percent to 5,838.59.

Kraft Heinz jumped 10.7 while Unilever surged 14.0 percent after Unilever rejected a bid worth about $143 billion. However, Kraft Heinz signalled it would still pursue a deal.

Other consumer products stocks also rose on speculation the Kraft Heinz talks could spur other deals. Colgate Palmolive gained 4.3 percent, Kimberly Clark 4.1 percent, and Clorox 2.8 percent.

T-Mobile advanced 5.5 percent and Sprint rose 3.4 percent following a report that Sprint parent SoftBank planned to approach T-Mobile about a merger of the two wireless carriers.

United Health Group fell 3.7 percent on reports that the Justice Department joined a whistleblower lawsuit alleging the company overcharged Medicare hundreds of millions of dollars.

Boeing gained 1.1 percent following a visit by Trump to a South Carolina plant to commemorate the unveiling of its latest 787 “Dreamliner” plane.