By Ryan Vlastelica
NEW YORK (Reuters) - APPLE (AAPL.NQ)Inc
The stock was pressured after Apple pulled back an update to its new operation system, which some users complained had resulted in a drop in cellular service and an inability to use the fingerprint-reading Touch ID feature.
The issues, which Apple said it would fix in another software update to be released in the next few days, were the latest snag for the rollout of the company's iPhone 6 and 6 Plus lines. While the launch was hugely successful, with Apple shipping 10 million units in the first weekend, the large-screen device was also hit by claims that it could bend when placed in back pockets.
Shares lost 3 percent to $98.66, moving on volume of about 60 million shares, already ahead of their 50-day average of 56.46 million. The stock earlier fell as much as 4 percent, at one point breaking sharply below its 50-day moving average of $98.74.
Currently, Apple is holding at that level, suggesting it may serve as support against deeper losses. The stock hasn't closed below its 50-day moving average since April 23, though it remains well under its 14-day moving average.
Apple is the biggest drag to both the Nasdaq and the S&P 500, where it is accounting for almost 3 points of the benchmark index's 26-point decline.
(Editing by Meredith Mazzilli)
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