By Victor Reklaitis, MarketWatch

NEW YORK (MarketWatch) -- U.S. stocks finished little changed on Wednesday after erasing early losses that followed a selloff in Asian and European equities.

Analysts attributed the morning selling to worries about China's slowdown and Russia-Ukraine tensions, and they also emphasized a lack of new catalysts.

"Basically, we have no economic numbers to speak of today," said Peter Cardillo, chief market economist at Rockwell Global Capital. The market just followed the international markets in the early going, but it didn't show signs of collapsing and stayed near its record highs, he said.

The S&P 500(SPX) ended up 0.57 point, or less than 0.1%, at 1,868.20, with utilities and tech faring best among the index's 10 sectors. The benchmark, which had been down 0.7% intraday, snapped a two-day losing streak and stands just 0.5% off Friday's record close.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average(DJI) dipped 11.24 points, or 0.1%, to close at 16,340.01, slipping for the third day in a row.

The Nasdaq Composite(RIXF) gained 16.14 points, or 0.4%, to finish at 4,323.33, halting a four-session losing streak.

Asian markets closed lower on Wednesday, with Japan's Nikkei benchmark and Hong Kong's Hang Seng shedding 2.6% and 1.7%, respectively. The Stoxx Europe 600 finished down 1.1% for its lowest close in a month.

A much larger than-expected decline in Chinese exports rocked markets at the start of the week and continued to inspire worries on Wednesday. Leaders of the Group of Seven nations warned Russia on Wednesday not to annex Ukraine's Crimean region.

Copper, a proxy for global growth, has slumped this week on the China worries, though it rallied somewhat on Wednesday. High-grade copper(HGK4) for May delivery has traded below $3 a pound this week, a level not seen by the metal since July 2010. (Read more: China's role in copper's slide: Why investors should care http://blogs.marketwatch.com/thetell/2014/03/12/chinas-role-in-coppers-collapse-why-investors-should-care/.)

The U.S. economic calendar was empty on Wednesday, leaving investors to focus on the overseas news -- as well as look ahead to Thursday's reading on retail sales and next week's Federal Reserve meeting.

Among individual stocks, VeriFone Systems Inc.(PAY) jumped 11%. Late Tuesday, the maker of electronic payment devices reported a fiscal first-quarter loss but it also guided second-quarter revenue above Wall Street's forecasts.

On the downside, Express Inc.(EXPR) shed 12% after the clothing retailer said fourth-quarter earnings fell 25% due to extensive promotions and discounting. (Read more in the Movers & Shakers column http://www.marketwatch.com/story/oxigene-doubles-fannie-and-freddie-extend-fall-2014-03-12.)

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