The indexes spent much of the day in the red due to very disappointing Q3 reports from Amazon and Apple, but thankfully offset by good news from Microsoft which not only bounced them back but even respectably in the black again. As today’s expert put it, “The takeaway is the resilience to the overall index despite 10% of the market cap in two companies and yet the market is flat” (actually up!)
To put the day’s events in an even better light, “this is not business lost but business postponed and the trend continues to the upside.” The S&P and Nasdaq have seen their biggest monthly rise in a year and the Dow has marked four straight weekly gains. Consumer spending remains solid, even increasing, and investors now look to the Fed whether inflation remains transitory. 56% of the S&P has reported with 82% beating forecasts and now putting the Q3 earnings growth forecast at 39.2%. Volume remains above average at 11.1 billion.
FRI
OCTOBER 29, 2021 6:17 PM
Wall Street shakes off Amazon, Apple
weakeness to end modestly higher
DJ: 35,730.48 +239.79 NAS: 15,448.12 +212.28 S&P: 4,596.42 +44.74 10/28
DJ: 35,819.56 +89.08 NAS: 15,498.39 +50.27 S&P: 4,605.38
+8.96 10/29
NEW
YORK (Reuters) - U.S. stocks shook off early declines and closed out the last
trading day of the month with modest gains on Friday as a rise in Microsoft
helped offset declines in Amazon and Apple after disappointing quarterly
earnings from the online retailer and iPhone maker. Microsoft Corp’s shares closed at a record
high of $331.62 and ended the session with a market capitalization of $2.49
trillion, surpassing Apple Inc’s market cap of roughly $2.48 trillion. Apple lost 1.81% after it warned the impact
of supply-chain disruptions will be even worse during the current holiday sales
quarter, while Amazon.com Inc declined 2.15% as it forecast downbeat
holiday-quarter sales amid labor shortages.
“The takeaway from today is the resilience to the overall
index despite 10% of market cap in two companies disappointing and yet the
market is flat. It’s the resilience of the marketplace, it suggests to
me the trend is still intact,” said
David Joy, chief market strategist at Ameriprise Financial in Boston. “Maybe the numbers were a surprise to the
analyst community but not the reasons for the disappointment so there is still
a general view that this
is not business lost but business postponed and the trend in the economy and in
the market continues to be to the upside.”
The
Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 89.08 points, or 0.25%, to 35,819.56, the
S&P 500 gained 8.96 points, or 0.19%, to 4,605.38 and the Nasdaq Composite
added 50.27 points, or 0.33%, to 15,498.39. The S&P 500 had fallen as
much as 0.65% earlier in the day. The benchmark index advanced 1.3% for the
week, its fourth straight
weekly climb, marking its longest weekly streak of gains since April. For the month, the S&P rose 6.9%, its biggest
monthly rise since November 2020.
The
Dow rose 0.4% for the week
while the Nasdaq gained 2.7%, also marking four straight weekly gains for each. The Dow
climbed 5.8% for October, its best monthly performance since March, while the Nasdaq jumped 7.3% for its
biggest monthly percentage gain since November 2020. Apple had risen about 2.5% while Amazon
gained 1.6% in Thursday’s session, helping to send the S&P 500 and Nasdaq
to closing record highs.
With 279 companies in the S&P 500 having reported
results through Friday morning, 82.1% have topped earnings expectations, according to Refinitiv
data. The current year-over-year earnings growth rate for the third quarter is 39.2%. Market participants have been closely attuned
to the ability of companies to maneuver through labor shortages, rising price
pressures and clogs in the supply chain, and a solid earnings season has helped investors overlook a
mixed macroeconomic picture with a Federal Reserve that is poised to
begin to trim its massive bond purchases soon.
The central bank’s next policy announcement is on Nov. 3.
Data showed U.S. consumer spending increased solidly in September,
while inflation pressures are broadening.
The data indicated the jury is still out on whether the Fed’s “transitory” view on inflation
will hold true.
AbbVie Inc advanced 4.56% as the U.S.
drugmaker raised its 2021 adjusted profit forecast for the third time this
year. Starbucks Corp tumbled 6.30% after
the coffee chain said it expects fiscal 2022 operating margin to be below its
long-term target due to inflation and investments.
Declining issues outnumbered advancing
ones on the NYSE by a 1.14-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 1.02-to-1 ratio favored
advancers. The S&P 500 posted 50 new
52-week highs and 4 new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 127 new highs and
78 new lows.
Volume on U.S. exchanges was 11.12 billion shares, compared with the 10.35 billion average for the full session over the last 20 trading days.
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