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NEW YORK — Wall Street ended mixed Tuesday as concerns about the path of Hurricane Gustav sent oil prices higher and offset a better- than-expected reading on consumer confidence.

Comments from the Federal Reserve about rising inflation added to the market’s uneasiness.

The Fed’s release of minutes from its Aug. 5 meeting showed that the central bank remains concerned about creeping inflation and that it expected it would need to raise interest rates to try to contain rising prices.

At that meeting, policymakers held rates steady because “American businesses and consumers were facing elevated borrowing costs and reduced credit availability.”

However, the Fed also said in the minutes that it was far from clear when a rate hike might come.

There was some optimism at the start of the day on Wall Street after the Conference Board said its consumer-confidence index rose to 56.9 from a revised 51.9 in July; analysts had expected a reading of 53. That marked the second month in a row that sentiment improved, after a six-month slide since January.

Meanwhile, the Commerce Department reported that new-home sales rose 2.4 percent in July. While analysts expected a drop in sales, the July increase followed a sharp downward revision to June’s sales.

However, concerns that Gustav would hit installations in the Gulf of Mexico in the coming days sent energy prices higher.

A barrel of light, sweet crude ended the day up $1.16 to settle at $116.27 on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

The Dow Jones industrials rose 26.62, or 0.23 percent, to 11,412.87.

Broader indexes were mixed. The Standard & Poor’s 500 index rose 4.67, or 0.37 percent, to 1,271.51; the Nasdaq composite fell 3.62, or 0.15 percent, to 2,361.97.

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