MarketView for October 26

MarketView for Friday, October 26
 

 

 

MarketView

 

Events defining the day's trading activity on Wall Street

 

Lauren Rudd

 

Friday, October 26, 2012

 

 

Dow Jones Industrial Average

13,107.21

p

+3.53

+0.03%

Dow Jones Transportation Average

5,052.35

p

+17.06

+0.34%

Dow Jones Utilities Average

475.49

q

-0.31

-0.07%

NASDAQ Composite

2,987.95

p

+1.83

+0.06%

S&P 500

1,411.94

q

-1.03

-0.07%

 

 

Summary

 

The major equity indexes ended the day virtually unchanged on Friday, recovering from moderate declines as bargain hunters rushed in to buy Apple, lifting it off its lows, and scooped up other stocks recently battered by disappointing results. However, the week, it was not a good week on Wall Street as a series of weak results, especially from domestic multinational companies took their toll on the week’s performance.

 

Apple's pulled back sharply from its session low, although it still ended down 0.9 percent at $604. The world's largest publicly traded company surprised analysts late Thursday with its weak margin outlook, as well as with its quarterly earnings and iPad sales that fell short of expectations. The stock had fallen as low as $591 in Friday's session.

 

A number of companies, including Intel, recovered from their losses of last week when Intel reported net earnings and revenue that missed estimates. In Friday's session, Intel's stock gained 1.2 percent to close at $21.95.

 

Investors had a muted reaction to data showing a slightly better-than-expected pace of growth for the economy. The 2 percent annual rate of growth for gross domestic product for the third quarter confirmed analysts' views that the economic recovery will be slow.

 

For the week, the Dow took a hit of 1.8 percent, the S&P 500 lost 1.5 percent and the Nasdaq was down 0.6 percent.

 

Lighter revenues have been a concern this earnings season. Just 36.9 percent of S&P 500 companies so far have reported revenue that beat forecasts, compared with the 62 percent that typically exceed expectations, according to Thomson Reuters data. Earnings have fared better, with 62.5 percent above expectations - almost even with the 62 percent that is historically seen.

 

Amazon escaped the market's malaise, climbing 6.9 percent to $238.24 as analysts said the online retailer's spending will hurt margins, but boost profit in the long run.

 

Adding to uncertainty was the presidential election on November 6 - a little over a week away. Along with earnings and growth worries, concerns about further political loggerheads have helped push the benchmark S&P 500 index below a key support level, the 50-day moving average, at around 1,434.

 

Many analysts expect the S&P 500's retreat to wane near 1,400 or 1,375, as the Federal Reserve's latest stimulus policy puts a floor under stock prices.

 

Some of investors' attention on Friday may have been diverted from the market to following news about Hurricane Sandy, which could make landfall along the East Coast, including New York, early next week. By Friday afternoon, the storm had killed at least 41 people as it tore across the Caribbean. The New York Stock Exchange said it plans on business as usual, adding that it has contingency plans to keep the market running - relying on back-up power generation facilities, if necessary. The NYSE also said in a statement that it will make accommodations for critical staff and traders.

 

In addition, NASDAQ OMX said in a statement that it has plans to make sure its systems are ready, noting that it will be regularly communicating with its members before, up to and after the storm.

 

Among other stocks that finished Friday's session with a gain, Honeywell International edged up 0.1 percent to $61.49. The diversified manufacturer said on Friday that it would raise its quarterly dividend by 10 percent to 41 cents per share, starting with the fourth-quarter dividend payment on December 10.

 

Volume was moderate on Friday, with about 6.02 billion shares changing hands on the three major equity exchanges, as compared with a daily average volume of 6.51 billion shares so far this year.