tue APRIL 2, 2019 / 4:33 pm
Wall Street treads water after rally,
Walgreens slumps on profit warning
DJ: 26,179.13 -79.29 NAS: 7,848.69 +19.78 S&P: 2,867.24
+0.05 4/2
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The
benchmark S&P 500 stock index paused on Tuesday, taking a breather from
Monday’s strong quarterly kickoff as a decline in shares of Walgreens Boots Alliance
Inc weighed and economic data did little to ease growth concerns. Walgreens shares slumped 12.8% after the
drugstore chain cut its 2019 profit growth forecast and reported a quarterly
profit that missed analyst estimates. The
S&P 500 consumer staples index, which includes Walgreens, dropped 0.8%.
Shares of rival drugstore company CVS Health Corp fell 3.8%. Shares of drug wholesalers
AmerisourceBergen Corp, Cardinal Health Inc and McKesson Corp also slid. Walgreens shares weighed the most on all three
of Wall Street’s major indexes. CVS and the drug wholesalers were also among
the biggest drags on the S&P 500.
The Nasdaq moved higher, however, as shares of Facebook Inc
jumped 3.3%.
Data showing that new orders for key U.S.-made capital goods slipped in February
and that shipments were flat did little to lift tepid investor sentiment. Orders for non-defense capital goods excluding aircraft, or core
capital goods orders, a closely watched proxy for business spending plans, fell 0.1%. Economists
polled by Reuters had forecast it to remain unchanged.
The data comes on the
heels of a survey showing a surprise rebound in China’s manufacturing activity
and better-than-expected U.S. numbers, which drove the S&P 500 to near six-month highs on Monday. “We’re still seeing mixed signals in terms of economic data,”
said Emily Roland, head of capital markets research at John Hancock Investments
in Boston.
The Dow Jones Industrial
Average fell 79.29 points, or 0.30%, to 26,179.13, the S&P 500 gained 0.05
points to 2,867.24, and the Nasdaq Composite added 19.78 points, or 0.25%, to
7,848.69. Despite coming under pressure, the S&P 500 is only 2.2% below a
record closing high hit in late September as the Federal Reserve has
paused interest-rate hikes and investors have grown optimistic about a
resolution to the U.S.-China trade war.
Yet with the first-quarter corporate earnings reporting season
about two weeks away, investors are bracing for what may be the first U.S. profit decline since
2016. Analysts expect
quarterly earnings to fall 2%, according to Refinitiv data. “There are reassuring signs that the global economy isn’t tumbling
into a recession,” said Kate Warne, investment strategist at Edward
Jones in St. Louis. “But it’s not sufficient to have economic growth. We also
need earnings growth.”
Airline stocks got a lift from Delta Air Lines Inc’s better-than-expected
first-quarter profit forecast. Its shares jumped 6.0%, while the Dow Jones US Airlines index
advanced 2.8%. Dow Inc shares rose 5.1%
in the company’s stock market debut following its spinoff from DowDuPont Inc.
Declining issues outnumbered advancing ones on the NYSE by a
1.13-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 1.04-to-1 ratio favored advancers. The S&P 500 posted 45 new 52-week highs
and five new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 54 new highs and 41 new lows.
Volume on U.S. exchanges
was 6.45 billion shares,
compared to the 7.46 billion average over the last 20 trading days.
\
No comments:
Post a Comment