The combo of dropping oil prices and the flattening of the Treasury yield curve prompted investors to move money out of cyclicals and into the more reliable tech sector with the Nasdaq up over 120 points before crashing back down to break-even in the final hour of trading, and the Dow taking a hit of 266 points. Q3 reporting continues swimmingly with 192 companies reporting and 83% beating estimates, prompting the Q3 earnings forecast to once again be bumped up, today to 37.6 percent. Volume was again above average at 11.7 billion.
WED
OCTOBER 27, 2021 4:27 PM
Cyclicals drag S&P 500 lower;
Microsoft, Alphabet keep Nasdaq flat
DJ: 35,756.88 +15.73 NAS: 15,235.72 +9.01 S&P: 4,574.79 +8.31 10/26
DJ: 35,490.69 -266.19 NAS: 15,235.84 +0.12 S&P: 4,551.68
-23.11 10/27
NEW
YORK (Reuters) - The Nasdaq ended little changed on Wednesday, boosted by gains
in Microsoft and Google parent Alphabet on the heels of their quarterly
results, but a drop in oil prices and a pullback in Treasury yields weighed on
cyclical sectors and pulled the S&P 500 lower. Microsoft Corp gained 4.21% to close at a
record high after forecasting a strong end to the calendar year, fueled in part
by its booming cloud business. Alphabet Inc jumped 4.96% after reporting a
record quarterly profit on a surge in ad sales.
The gains in the two stocks accounted for nearly 90 points to the upside
in the tech-heavy Nasdaq while Microsoft was the biggest boost to the Dow
Industrials, S&P 500 and Nasdaq. A
pullback in longer-term U.S. Treasury bond yields and a flattening of the yield
curve also helped support growth names such as those in consumer discretionary
and communications services, which were the only advancing S&P sectors on
the day.
The benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury yield declined for a
fourth straight day, dropping more than 6 basis points to put it on
track for its biggest one-day decline since Aug. 13. “The growth names will get a boost not just from some of the earnings
stuff but because interest rates are lower,” said Megan Horneman,
director of portfolio strategy at Verdence Capital Advisors in Hunt Valley, Maryland. “Interest rates are temporarily lower because of the fact that
there is some uncertainty from the tax perspective and what that might do. We
do know the Fed is going to taper, that has pretty much been priced in but now
you have a lot of talk about what the future of the Federal Reserve may look
like.”
The
Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 266.19 points, or 0.74%, to 35,490.69, the
S&P 500 lost 23.11 points, or 0.51%, to 4,551.68 and the Nasdaq Composite
added 0.12 point, or unchanged, to 15,235.84.
In
contrast, the flattening curve served to weaken financials, while a drop in
crude prices after data on U.S. stockpiles pulled energy names lower, with both
sectors suffering their biggest one-day percentage decline in five weeks. JP Morgan shares
fell 2.08% and Exxon Mobil declined 2.60%.
A solid start to earnings season has
helped push the S&P 500 and the Dow to all-time highs this week, as
investor concerns over the ability of companies to navigate supply-chain
bottlenecks, labor shortages and rising price pressures have been allayed for
now. The Nasdaq sits less than 1% away from Sept. 7 closing record. “While we are not out of the woods by any
means, companies are adjusting quicker than we had anticipated,” said Horneman.
Profits
for S&P 500 companies are expected to grow 37.6% year-on-year in the third quarter. Out
of the 192 companies
that have reported earnings, 82.8%
have topped analyst expectations, according to Refinitiv IBES data. The move into the growth names like technology stocks was also
triggered after some U.S. Senate Democrats proposed taxing billionaires’
unrealized gains from their assets, while concerns around the timing of
rate hikes resurfaced ahead of the Federal Reserve’s policy meeting next week. The
S&P 500 growth index
climbed about 0.28% while its value counterpart fell 1.44%.
Robinhood Markets Inc tumbled 10.44%
after the retail broker reported downbeat third-quarter revenue as trading
levels declined for cryptocurrencies including dogecoin.
Declining issues outnumbered advancing
ones on the NYSE by a 2.43-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 2.29-to-1 ratio favored
decliners. The S&P 500 posted 36 new
52-week highs and 5 new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 72 new highs and
133 new lows.
Volume on U.S. exchanges was 11.74 billion shares, compared with the 10.43 billion average for the full session over the last 20 trading days.
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