Fri 9-11-20
A 131 point gain on the Dow put the tech sector in its biggest weekly decline since March so investors know that the nervousness is not yet over. But the optimists took the point of view that this happens once a month or so and that “these companies are doing well during the pandemic” so don’t be surprised when money comes back to them. The consensus remains that the recent slump is merely a consolidation after “a stunning five month rally.” Volume was 8.9 billion.
Fri SEPTEMBER 11, 2020 6:02 pm
Dow ends higher but Wall Street posts second straight weekly
drop on tech slide
DJ: 27,534.58 -405.89 NAS: 10,919.59 -221.97 S&P: 3,339.19 -59.77 9/10
DJ: 27,665.64 +131.06 NAS: 10,853.55 -66.05 S&P: 3,340.97
+1.78 9/11
NEW
YORK (Reuters) - The Nasdaq slid and the S&P 500 closed little changed on
Friday as early gains in technology and growth names faded, with each of the
three major Wall Street averages posting their second straight weekly decline.
After hitting a record high of $61.86, shares
of Oracle Corp ORCL.N turned
lower along with the rest of the technology sector .SPLRCT, which closed down 0.75%. The cloud services
company's earnings beat estimates as it signaled a recovery in client spending
due to higher demand led by the work-at-home trend. The tech sector posted its fifth decline in six days and biggest weekly
percentage decline since March as investors sold companies such as Apple
Inc AAPL.O that
have spearheaded the dramatic rally from coronavirus-driven lows in March.
Apple shares slid 1.31%.
The path of least resistance for stocks
is volatile and probably a bit lower from here, said Art Hogan, chief market
strategist at National Securities in New York.
“Just because we
shaved 10 or 11 percent off the Nasdaq in three days doesn’t mean that is the
end of the nervousness and that is kind of where we are right now,”
Hogan said. Growth stocks .IGX, which include many tech names along with
others that have benefited from government-imposed lockdowns such as Amazon.com
Inc AMZN.O,
fell 0.26% while value names .IVX edged up 0.54%. Amazon fell 1.86%.
About
once a month the market experiences several days or a bit more of investors
dropping growth for value,
said Tim Ghriskey, chief investment strategist at Inverness Counsel in New
York. “While growth isn’t cheap, it is growth and a lot of these
companies are doing well during the pandemic so I wouldn’t be surprised to see
money coming back to them,” Ghriskey said.
The Dow
Jones Industrial Average .DJI closed up 131.06
points, or 0.48%, to 27,665.64. The S&P 500 .SPX gained 1.78 points,
or 0.05%, to 3,340.97 and the Nasdaq Composite .IXIC dropped 66.05 points,
or 0.6%, to 10,853.55. For the week, the Dow fell 1.66%, the S&P lost 2.51% and the
Nasdaq dropped 4.06%. Industrials .SPLRCI and financial stocks .SPSY, up 1.39% and 0.76% respectively on Friday,
provided the biggest boost to the benchmark index. Material .SPLRCM was the only S&P sector to end
higher on the week.
Gains in Home Depot Inc HD.N and Caterpillar Inc CAT.N, up 1.33% and 2.65% respectively, led the Dow
industrials to close up. Many investors view the recent slump as a healthy
consolidation after a stunning five-month rally in the S&P 500 that
was powered by a narrow group of heavyweight tech companies and massive amounts
of fiscal and monetary stimulus. Meanwhile,
the latest data showed U.S. consumer prices increased solidly in August, but
the labor market’s slack is likely to keep a lid on inflation as the economy
recovers from the COVID-19 recession.
Another beneficiary of coronavirus lockdowns,
exercise bike maker Peloton Interactive Inc PTON.O, gave up early gains and closed down 4.23%,
even as it reported forecast-beating quarterly revenue due to a surge in
subscribers and increased demand for its fitness products during the pandemic.
Volume
on U.S. exchanges was 8.91 billion shares.
Declining issues outnumbered advancing
ones on the NYSE by a 1.05-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 1.41-to-1 ratio favored
decliners. The S&P 500 posted 5 new
52-week highs and 1 new low; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 25 new highs and 37
new lows.
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