mon
OCTOBER 9, 2017 / 5:35 pM
Wall
Street recedes from highs as quarterly reports loom
DJ: 22,761.07 -12.60 NAS: 6,579.73
-10.45 S&P: 2,544.73
-4.60 10/9
(Reuters) - Wall Street fell from record
levels on Monday as gains in Microsoft and other technology stocks
failed to offset a drop in General Electric and a slide in healthcare stocks.
The S&P healthcare
index .SPXHC moved 0.67 percent lower, weighed by a 3.61-percent slide in
Medtronic (MDT.N) after the medical device maker warned
that its quarterly profit would be impacted after Hurricane Maria hit its
operations in Puerto Rico.
The S&P 500 has rallied 14 percent in 2017 and last week hit
record highs, buoyed by strong company earnings and enthusiasm that President
Donald Trump will cut corporate taxes.
JPMorgan Chase (JPM.N) and Citigroup (C.N) will report profits on Thursday,
kicking third-quarter corporate reporting season into high gear as investors
look for strong growth to justify pricey valuations.
“Unlike the restaurant chains, movie chains and homebuilders and
some of the discretionary stocks hurt by the hurricanes, I don’t expect the
banks to be affected by the non-recurring blips during the quarter,” said Jake
Dollarhide, chief executive officer of Longbow Asset Management in Tulsa,
Oklahoma.
Overall, earnings at S&P 500 companies are expected to have increased 4.8 percent last
quarter, according to Thomson Reuters data, down from the double-digit
growth recorded in the first two quarters of this year.
GE shares (GE.N) sank 3.94 percent after the
conglomerate named a new CFO and said it gave activist investment firm Trian
Fund Management a board seat. Nvidia (NVDA.O) rose 2.26 percent and the S&P 500
information technology index .SPLRCT added 0.24 percent, bringing its gain in
2017 to 28 percent.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average .DJI declined
0.06 percent to end at 22,761.07, while the S&P 500 .SPX lost
0.18 percent to 2,544.73. The Nasdaq
Composite .IXIC dropped
0.16 percent to 6,579.73.
The CBOE Volatility index
.VIX - Wall Street’s fear gauge - rose 0.77 point to 10.42, its highest in two
weeks.
Shares of cinema stocks
AMC Entertainment Holdings (AMC.N) and Regal Entertainment (RGC.N) fell more than 4 percent after
domestic opening weekend ticket sales for science fiction sequel “Blade Runner
2049” fell short of expectations. Also
weighing on the healthcare sector, Express Scripts (ESRX.O) lost 5 percent after Raymond James
downgraded the stock to “underperform” from “market perform”.
Tesla (TSLA.O) fell 3.91 percent after pushing back
the unveiling of its big rig truck to mid-November.
Viacom (VIAB.O) slipped 6.37 percent after Citigroup
downgraded the stock to “sell”, citing risks that pay-TV firms would stop
carrying its channels.
Declining issues outnumbered advancing ones on the NYSE by a
1.21-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 1.49-to-1 ratio favored decliners.
About 4.4
billion shares changed hands on U.S. exchanges, well below the 6.1
billion daily average for the past 20 trading days, according to Thomson
Reuters data.
No comments:
Post a Comment