Wall Street is hanging near its record heights Tuesday as earnings reporting season for big U.S. companies gets going. The S&P 500 was 0.1% lower in midday trading. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 183 points, or 0.5%, a day after topping 38,000 for the first time. The Nasdaq composite was 0.1% lower.
Quick Read
- Wall Street Near Record Heights: S&P 500 slightly lower, while Dow Jones and Nasdaq also experience modest declines.
- Earnings Reports Impacting Market: Mixed reactions to corporate earnings reports influencing market movements.
- 3M and Johnson & Johnson Earnings Disappoint: 3M’s weak earnings forecast and Johnson & Johnson’s lower-than-expected profits contribute to market drops.
- Procter & Gamble and United Airlines Positive Results: Their better-than-expected profits provide some market uplift.
- Busy Earnings Season: Numerous S&P 500 companies, including Tesla and Intel, set to report quarterly results.
- Verizon Communications and General Electric Earnings: Verizon beats profit estimates while General Electric’s stock falls despite surpassing expectations.
- D.R. Horton’s Lower Profits: Homebuilder’s stock drops following weaker-than-expected profit report.
- Analysts’ Low Profit Expectations: Predictions of weaker overall earnings per share for S&P 500 companies.
- Stock Market Rally on Interest Rate Cuts Expectation: Anticipated Federal Reserve rate cuts fueling market optimism.
- Mixed Treasury Yields: Increase in 10-year Treasury yield, but overall decrease since October.
- Investor Optimism Despite Risks: Barclays strategists note high investor confidence with little concern for downside risks.
- Global Market Movements: Hong Kong’s Hang Seng gains, Japan’s Nikkei 225 slightly falls despite Bank of Japan’s steady interest rates.
The Associated press has the story:
Wall Street drifts near records as earnings reporting season heats up
Newslooks- NEW YORK (AP) —
Wall Street is hanging near its record heights Tuesday as earnings reporting season for big U.S. companies gets going. The S&P 500 was 0.1% lower in midday trading. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 183 points, or 0.5%, a day after topping 38,000 for the first time. The Nasdaq composite was 0.1% lower.
3M tumbled 12% after the maker of Post-it notes and Command strips gave a forecast for earnings this upcoming year that fell short of analysts’ expectations. Johnson & Johnson was another weight on the market and fell 1.7% after reporting weaker profit for the latest quarter than expected.
They helped overshadow a 4.2% climb for Procter & Gamble, which posted stronger profit for the latest quarter than analysts expected. The company behind Charmin and Olay benefited from price hikes for is products, and it raised its forecast for profit for this full fiscal year.
United Airlines flew 6.9% higher after it also reported stronger profit for the last three months of 2023 than analysts expected. It made more in revenue from customers in both basic economy and premium seats, though it warned it may lose money in the first three months of this year because of the grounding of its Boeing 737 Max 9 planes.
Earnings season is kicking into gear, and more than a dozen companies in the S&P 500 reported their latest quarterly results Tuesday morning. More than 50 are scheduled to follow up later this week, including Tesla and Intel.
Among Tuesday’s headliners was Verizon Communications, which rose 5.7% after beating analysts’ profit estimates. General Electric also topped expectations, but its stock slipped 0.9% after it gave a forecast for profit this quarter that fell short of analysts’ forecasts. Homebuilder D.R. Horton sank 9.1% after reporting weaker profit than expected.
Expectations are relatively low for companies’ profits at the end of 2023. Analysts have forecast companies in the S&P 500 will deliver weaker overall earnings per share than a year earlier, which would be the fourth such decline in the last five quarters, according to FactSet.
Stocks have nevertheless rallied to records, and the S&P 500 returned to an all-time high last week for the first time in two years. Much of that is because of expectations for the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates several times this year after hiking them dramatically the last two years.
Such cuts can boost prices for investments while relaxing the pressure on the economy and financial system. The Federal Reserve itself has said it may cut rates three times this year as inflation cools, which would allow the central bank to loosen its leash on the economy.
Treasury yields have already eased significantly since the autumn on expectations for coming rate cuts, though critics warn traders may have gone overboard again in forecasting how many cuts will come and how soon the Fed will begin.
Yields were mixed in the bond market Tuesday. The yield on the 10-year Treasury rose to 4.14% from 4.11% late Monday, though it remains well below its 5% level during October.
The “everything rally” that began late last year on hopes for a pivot by the Fed likely caused mutual-fund managers to scramble to boost their ownership of stocks to keep up. Even when stocks took a mini-breather at the start of 2024, investors seemed to “remain little concerned with downside risk,” according to strategists at Barclays led by Venu Krishna. That could leave “less room for fundamental upside from here.”
In stock markets abroad, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng jumped 2.6% to recover some of its sharp losses for the year so far on hopes that Chinese authorities may make moves to shore up markets. The Hang Seng is still down nearly 10% so far in the young year on worries about a weak recovery for the world’s second-largest economy.
In Japan, one of the world’s best performers for the year so far slipped even though the Bank of Japan kept its interest-rate policies at ultra-easy levels. The Nikkei 225 dipped 0.1% after analysts took comments by a bank official as hints that hikes to rates may be coming this year.