The “bad boys” buying up Gamestop were back in action again after Robinhood, among others, eased restrictions thus again crushing the hedge funds with their shorting issues and causing the markets to crash again, all of which is being investigated by the SEC for suspected stock manipulation. Other factors contributing to the sell off include news casting some doubts on the upcoming J&J vaccine, the dangers of the South African variant, labor costs rising and consumer spending falling. What is continuing to save the day is positive Q4 reporting with 84% of 184 companies now beating estimates. Volume continues to spike with 17.1 billion shares traded.
FRI JANUARY 29, 2021 4:01 PM
Wall St drops after J&J vaccine
data, GameStop effect weighs
DJ: 30,603.36 +300.19 NAS: 13,337.16 +66.56 S&P: 3,787.38 +36.61 1/28
DJ: 29,982.62 -620.74 NAS: 13,070.70 -266.46 S&P: 3,714.24
-73.14 1/29
NEW
YORK (Reuters) - U.S. stock indexes dropped, closing out the Friday session
with the biggest weekly fall since October, as investors gauged the
ramifications of Johnson & Johnson’s COVID-19 vaccine trial results, while
a standoff between Wall Street hedge funds and small, retail investors added to
volatility. Johnson & Johnson fell
as one of the biggest weights on both the Dow and S&P500 after the
drugmaker said its single-dose vaccine was 72% effective in preventing COVID-19
in the United States, with a lower rate of 66% observed globally. The results compare to the high bar set by
two authorized vaccines from Pfizer Inc/BioNTech SE and Moderna Inc, which were
around 95% effective in preventing symptomatic illness in key trials when given
in two doses. Moderna shares climbed while Pfizer Shares were little changed.
Worries
of a short squeeze that began earlier in the week resurfaced after an army of retail investors
returned to trade shares in stocks such as GameStop Corp and Koss Corp, which
shot higher after brokers including Robinhood eased some of the restrictions
they had placed on trading. “The overall
picture is that if there is any bad news that suggests or indicates there could
be a longer hibernation period for us to be indoors and not consuming or
spending that tends to set the market back and a lot of people sit on the
sidelines, particularly with that news,” said Sylvia Jablonski, chief
investment officer at Defiance ETFs in New York. “And then what is going on with (Gamestop) and all that
stuff, people are a little
afraid to trade.”
The surge in volatility has led to a huge increase in volume,
totaling over 20 billion shares in each of the past two sessions across
U.S. exchanges for the most active trading days on record going back to 2014,
according to Refinitiv data.The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission said it was closely monitoring any
potential wrongdoing, to both brokerages and social media traders.
The
Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 620.74 points, or 2.03%, to 29,982.62, the
S&P 500 lost 73.14 points, or 1.93%, to 3,714.24 and the Nasdaq Composite
dropped 266.46 points, or 2%, to 13,070.70. All three main indexes suffered
their biggest weekly fall since the end of October.
Market participants have speculated that
volatility caused by the short squeezes have led to investor favorites
including Apple Inc coming under pressure as hedge funds sell to cover billions
of dollars in losses. Apple shares declined
while Microsoft also fell.
Still, while concerns about rising
COVID-19 cases and bumpy vaccine rollouts kept investors leery about a pullback
and an increase in volatility in the near-term, the start to quarterly earnings has eased
some concern about stretched stock valuations. Of the 184 companies in the S&P 500 that have
reported earnings through Friday morning, 84.2% have topped analyst expectations, well above
the 75.5% beat rate for the past four quarters, according to Refinitiv data.
Honeywell International fell after it
posted a 13% fall in quarterly profit.
The first known U.S. cases of the South African COVID-19 variant,
found to be partly resistant to current vaccines and antibody
treatments, was detected in South Carolina on Thursday.
Data showed U.S. labor costs rose more than expected in the
fourth quarter amid a jump in wages, supporting views that inflation could
accelerate this year, while another report showed U.S. consumer spending fell for a second straight month
in December.
Volume across U.S. exchanges on Friday was 17.13 billion shares, compared with the 15.26 billion average for the full session over the last 20 trading days.
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