By Jeffrey
Cane | Wednesday, October 27
Not
Today. Quarterly earnings have been impressive
enough to make investors put aside worries they may have about economic growth,
inflation, supply-chain snags, or Covid. Today, earnings were just not
enough.
Stocks sold off in the last
hour of trading, and the S&P 500 and Dow
Jones Industrial Average ended lower, a day after closing at new
records. The S&P 500 fell 0.5%, and the Dow, 0.7%. The Russell
2000 slumped
1.9%.
The Nasdaq
Composite did eke into positive territory, but by less
than a point, buoyed by the stellar showings from Microsoft (up 4.2%) and Alphabet (up 4.8%). The Nasdaq has a three-day winning
streak going, and has been up nine of the last 11 trading sessions.
Growth stocks outperformed
value. Consumer discretionary was the only S&P 500 sector to end in the
green.
Energy was the
worst-performing sector, as crude oil prices fell 2.4%, to $82.66 a barrel.
Refiners were among the hardest hit. Phillips
66 was
down 5.9%, and Valero Energy was down 4%. Exxon
Mobil fell 2.6%. Alternative energy, however, was a
bright spot. Enphase Energy led the S&P 500, jumping 24.7%,
after its
quarterly results blew past forecasts, lifting other solar
stocks.
A flattening yield curve
weighed on financial stocks. The yield on the two-year
Treasury note rose to 0.491%, a fresh 52-week high, while
the yield on the 10-year fell to 1.528%, its sharpest one-day decline
since July. Goldman Sachs lost 1.6%,
and JPMorgan Chase declined 2.1%. Visa tumbled 6.9% following a Wall Street Journal report that antitrust
investigators are examining its ties to fintechs. Those three financial
companies accounted for a nearly 173-point drop in the Dow.
There was no great narrative
driving the market today, though there were dozens if not hundreds of
individual stories, nearly all of them about earnings: Coca-Cola, McDonald's, General Motors, Boeing, and Spotify Technology were among the ones Barron's covered today. Tomorrow the earnings
focus will again be on Big Tech, with Amazon.com and Apple reporting after the close.
In other markets, gold edged up 0.3%, to $1,798.10 an ounce. The U.S. dollar was slightly weaker against other major currencies. And Bitcoin was lower, trading around $58,957 this afternoon.
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