US stock indexes logged their first monthly loss since May with the S&P 500 retreating 2.01%, capping a weak month on a mixed note Wednesday after markets reopened following a two-day closure due to super-storm Sandy.
Economic data was relatively light with the Chicago Purchasing Manager’s Index data for October printing at 49.9 from 49.7 in the prior month, still in the ‘contractionary’ region and signaling weakness in the manufacturing sector for the second straight month. Readings above 50 indicate expansion.
Stocks in the construction and housing sectors are likely to rise due to the massive rebuilding that will follow after Hurricane Sandy. However, odds are insurance companies will suffer as markets try to figure out the earnings hit the sector will take in the fourth quarter.



