It was a shot straight down on all the indexes as two bad reports, one from Apple and one from AMD, spooked the whole tech sector bringing the tech index down 2% or, as other experts put it, simply taking profits after these huge rallies and ahead of Powell’s testimony Wednesday and Thursday and the payrolls report on Friday. All three indexes retreated steadily to close down more than 1%, the Dow losing 404 points. Volume continues considerably above average at 13.2 billion.
Tech-heavy Nasdaq leads Wall Street lower as
megacaps, chips slide
By Sinéad Carew and Bansari Mayur
Kamdar
Tue March 5, 2024 4:28 PM
DJ: 38,989.83 -97.55 NAS: 16,207.51 -67.43 S&P: 5,130.95 -6.13 3/4
DJ: 38,585.19 -404.64 NAS: 15,939.59 -267.92 S&P: 5,078.65
-52.30 3/5
March 5 (Reuters) - Wall Street three major indexes all retreated more than 1% on Tuesday,
with weakness in megacap growth companies such as Apple Inc and the chip sector
weighing most on the Nasdaq ahead of this week's crop of economic data and
remarks from Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell. Tuesday's economic data was a mixed bag
showing slower U.S.
services industry growth in February as employment declined while a
measure of new orders grew to a six-month high, signaling underlying strength
in the sector. The Purchasing Managers
Index report on Tuesday confirmed continued economic growth despite 525 basis
points worth of interest rate hikes from the Fed since March 2022.
Another survey
showed new
orders for U.S.-manufactured goods dropped more than expected in
January. Some
strategists saw the technology (.SPLRCT),
opens new tab sell-off
on Tuesday as the result of profit taking for a sector which had
recently rallied after rising 56% in 2023.
"Maybe some people are taking chips off the table, taking
some profits in the high flying areas, in conjunction with what is probably
justified nerves before Powell speaks and before we get the big slew of labor
market data," said Kevin Gordon, senior investment strategist at Charles
Schwab. Two reports helped to create a risk-off tone, said
Craig Fehr, head of investment strategy at Edward Jones in St. Louis. Apple (AAPL.O),
opens new tab shares finished down 2.8% after a research report showed iPhone
sales in China fell 24% year-on-year in the first six weeks of 2024
as Apple faced
increased competition from domestic rivals such as Huawei (HWT.UL). Also the chip sector was battered after Bloomberg News reported that
Advanced Micro Devices hit a roadblock in its efforts to sell an
artificial intelligence chip tailored for the Chinese market as Washington
cracks down on advanced technology exports to Beijing. Chip rivals fell in sympathy with the
Philadelphia semiconductor index (.SOX), opens new tab,
which closed down 2%.
Fehr also attributed some of Tuesday's weakness to recent rallies. The benchmark
S&P 500 (.SPX), opens new tab had hit a fresh intraday record
high on Monday before closing slightly lower.
"It's reasonable and even healthy to take some pit stops along the way. This
market is, to a degree, stopping for a breather after what's been a very sharp
run higher," he said.
The Dow Jones Industrial
Average (.DJI), opens new tab fell 404.64 points, or 1.04%, to
38,585.19. The S&P 500 (.SPX), opens
new tab lost 52.3 points, or 1.02%, at 5,078.65 and the Nasdaq
Composite (.IXIC),
opens new tab dropped 267.92 points, or 1.65%, to 15,939.59. Eight of the 11 major
S&P 500 industry indexes declined, with technology ending down 1.2% and
consumer discretionary (.SPLRCD),
opens new tab falling 1.3%. Energy (.SPNY),
opens new tab, up 0.7%, was the biggest gainer followed by consumer
staples (.SPLRCS), opens new tab, which rose 0.3%.
Along with Powell's testimony before lawmakers on Wednesday and
Thursday, investors are also anxiously awaiting more clues about interest rate
policy from economic data, including the crucial non-farm payrolls report, due
out on Friday. The majority of traders see the first rate cut
this year in June, as per CME Group's FedWatch tool.
Among megacap technology stocks, Tesla (TSLA.O),
opens new tab shares sank 3.9% after its European Gigafactory near Berlin halted production
following a suspected arson attack. On
the bright side, Target (TGT.N),
opens new tab shares rallied 12% after the retailer forecast annual
comparable sales largely above estimates, betting on same-day services, product
launches and a new membership program to boost spending. Microstrategy (MSTR.O),
opens new tab shares tumbled 21% after the bitcoin development company announced a
private offering for $600 million in convertible senior notes, with proceeds to
be used to buy bitcoin.
Declining issues outnumbered advancers on the NYSE by a
1.40-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 1.76-to-1 ratio favored decliners. The S&P 500 posted 50 new 52-week highs
and eight new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 93 new highs and 113 new
lows.
On U.S. exchanges 13.22 billion shares changed hands compared with the 11.99
billion average for the last 20 sessions.
No comments:
Post a Comment