"Liquidity remains very light in equities as there are a lot of empty seats on the Street," Dave Lutz, a Baltimore-based trader with Stifel, Nicolaus & Co, told Reuters. "We're also seeing some outsized moves."
While the clean-up from Sandy was accelerating, public transport remained far lower than capacity and officials don't expect a return to normal levels for several days.
Shares of Facebook, meanwhile, fell, last down 4.1 per cent, as the period during which employees were not allowed to sell their stock ended on October 29. Facebook shares were sold in an initial public offering in May.
Car makers, however, were having a great day. Shares of General Motors gained 9.1 per cent, while those of Ford Motor rose 6.4 per cent, after both reported solid results that exceeded expectations. GM reported today, Ford reported yesterday.
On the economic front, the news was mixed. Labor Department data showed that the employment cost index rose 0.4 per cent in the third quarter, after advancing 0.5 per cent in the prior quarter. However, a report from the Institute for Supply Management-Chicago showed that business activity unexpectedly shrank in October.
The Labor Department also confirmed it would release the monthly payrolls report on Friday as scheduled.
Europe's Stoxx 600 Index finished the session with a 0.5 per cent decline from the previous close. National benchmark stock indexes also fell in Germany, the UK and France. BG Group warned that production growth would stall next year.
The overall mood was dampened by renewed calls for Greece to increase its cost-cutting efforts to satisfy the conditions of its bailout, rekindling concern that the progress on solving the euro zone's debt crisis remains glacial at best.
Data from the European Union's statistics office today showed that unemployment in the euro zone rose to 11.6 per cent in September.