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US stocks close up but struggle as Caterpillar dims out

A diminished sales forecast by industrial bellwether Caterpillar has clouded stocks, but a last-minute burst of buying pushed the Dow and S&P 500 barely back into the black for the session.

The Nasdaq, however, claimed solid gains on the back of a 4.0 per cent surge by Apple, clawing back much of its losses of late last week.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average finished up 2.38 points (0.02 per cent) at 13,345.89.

The broad-based S&P 500 climbed 0.62 (0.04 percent) to 1,433.81, while the Nasdaq Composite gained 11.34 points (0.38 per cent) at 3,016.96.

Caterpillar’s own shares gained 1.4 per cent after the heavy equipment maker posted firm profit gains on steady revenue growth.

But the company reduced its forecast for the full year, warning that China’s slowdown, the eurozone crisis, and general global sluggishness, would dampen its growth prospects.

“As we’ve moved through the year, we’ve seen continued economic weakening and uncertainty. It’s definitely impacting our business with dealers intending to lower inventories and mining customers delaying some projects and reducing orders,” said chief executive Doug Oberhelman.

That echoed forecasts by other companies in the past two weeks of third-quarter reporting that has tempered investor enthusiasm.

Apple, however, made a jump ahead of its expected release of the iPad mini, though there was no evidence of a link after the company’s shares gave up more than seven percent between Wednesday and Friday.

General Electric, which disappointed investors with its earnings last week, lost another 2.0 per cent, taking its loss since Thursday to 5.7 per cent.

Coal giant Peabody Energy jumped 10.8 per cent despite a sharp fall in third-quarter profits. Revenue growth came in better than expected.

On the Nasdaq, Ancestry.com surged 7.8 per cent to $US31.45 after the announcement that European private equity group Permira Funds would take it over for $US32 a share.

Amazon slipped nearly three per cent and Microsoft 2.3 percent, while Google edged 0.9 per cent lower.

Bond prices fell. The yield on the 10-year US Treasury rose to 1.81 per cent from 1.76 per cent Friday, while the 30-year advanced to 2.96 per cent from 2.93 per cent.

Bond prices move inversely to yields.