Markets |
Wall Street ends flat; Alphabet and Microsoft
tumble
DJ: 18,003.75 +21.23 NAS: 4,906.23
-39.66 S&P: 2,091.58
+0.10
(Reuters) Wall
Street finished flat on Friday after disappointing quarterly reports from
Microsoft and Alphabet slammed tech stocks, while a surge in oil prices lifted
energy shares. The S&P technology sector dropped
1.9 percent, its worst decline since early February, with Facebook down 2.5
percent and Intel falling 1.03 percent.
Microsoft dropped 7.17
percent, contributing the biggest drag to the S&P 500, and Google-parent Alphabet lost 5.41
percent as investors punished both companies for missing profit and
revenue estimates. It was Alphabet's
worst day since 2012.
Helped by a softer dollar and a recovery in oil prices, the
S&P 500 has rebounded from a steep selloff earlier this year and is only
about 2 percent short of last May's record high.
Wall Street has rock-bottom expectations as companies post their
first-quarter results over the next few weeks, with S&P 500 companies on average seen reporting a
7.1-percent fall in profit, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.
Crude rose over 1 percent
on signs of strong U.S. gasoline consumption, declining production around the
world and oilfield outages.
Oil prices have moved in lockstep with U.S. stocks for several
months and some investors expected more gains next week.
So far, 77
percent of first-quarter earnings have exceeded expectations, which is superior
to the 63-percent beat rate in a typical quarter.
"What's driving the market right now is earnings and
oil," said Thomas Wilson, Managing Director of Wealth Advisory at Brinker
Capital.
"If earnings results come in above the very low bar of
expectations that are out there, and you combine that with a continued rising
price of oil, that should equate to an upward trend in the market next
week."
The Dow Jones industrial
average edged up 0.12 percent to end at 18,003.75 points, while the S&P 500
finished flat at 2,091.58. The Nasdaq
Composite dropped 0.8 percent to 4,906.23, reflecting the selloff in tech
shares. Eight of the 10 major S&P
sectors rose, with energy up 1.33 percent.
For the week, the Dow added 0.6 percent, the S&P 500 gained 0.5
percent and the Nasdaq lost 0.6 percent.
Also hurting sentiment during Friday's session, Starbucks fell
4.88 percent after missing sales expectations, while Visa lost 2.08 percent
after it cut full-year revenue forecast.
Advancing issues outnumbered decliners on the NYSE by 2,127 to
875. On the Nasdaq, 1,758 issues rose and 1,049 fell.
The S&P 500 index showed 11 new 52-week highs and two new
lows, while the Nasdaq recorded 44 new highs and 21 new lows.
About 7.1
billion shares changed hands on U.S. exchanges, above the 6.8 billion
daily average for the past 20 trading days, according to Thomson Reuters data.
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