Wall Street resumes selloff; S&P flirts with correction

Wall Street resumes selloff; S&P flirts with correction

Reuters 

By Amy Caren Daniel

The tumbled nearly 3 percent. The Dow sank 1.7 percent and the 2.3 percent, with the S&P's session low taking it more than 10 percent below its Sept. 20 all-time closing high. If it closes at these levels, this would confirm a correction.

While the U.S. continues to grow, despite trade wars, the same cannot be said of U.S. corporate profit growth, with a slew of disappointing forecasts this earnings season showing how tariffs, rising wages and borrowing costs, as well as jitters over geopolitical events are hitting companies.

The latest and, perhaps the most high-profile, came last night from com Inc and Alphabet Inc, two stocks that have helped power the equity markets decade-long bull run.

tumbled 8.7 percent after it missed quarterly sales estimates and gave a below par holiday-season sales forecast, sparking a 3.07-percent plunge in the consumer discretionary sector.

Google-parent Alphabet sank 4 percent after its revenue missed estimates, fanning concerns that regulatory scrutiny and competition would throttle its scorching pace of growth.

That triggered a drop in other members of the so-called FAANG group. Inc fell 3.9 percent, Inc slid 2.1 percent and dropped 5 percent.

led the S&P down 2.64 percent, while the communication services sector, home to the rest of the FAANGs, dropped 3.07 percent.

"Expectations were really high going in to and Amazon's earnings. Investors were looking at their earnings to maybe prop up the market and get us out of this correction that we've been in," said Paul Brigandi, at Direxion in

"The correction was initially driven by interest rates and tariffs, so people were looking forward to earnings season to get us out of the downward trend we're in."

The selloff got some respite from data showing U.S. gross domestic product growth slowed less than expected in the third quarter as a tariff-related drop in soybean exports was partially offset by the strongest consumer spending in nearly four years and a surge in inventory investment.

"Even though the GDP numbers were good, they only gave a temporary relief to the markets," said Brigandi.

At 11:15 a.m. EDT the was down 428.64 points, or 1.72 percent, at 24,555.91, the was down 61.93 points, or 2.29 percent, at 2,643.64 and the Composite was down 215.49 points, or 2.94 percent, at 7,102.85.

A clutch of weak outlooks on Wednesday pushed the Nasdaq into correction territory and erased the Dow and the S&P 500's gains for the year. On Thursday, Microsoft Corp's strong earnings led a rally that pulled the S&P and the Dow back into the black for 2018.

stood out amid the carnage in technology stocks, jumping 3.1 percent after its better-than-expected quarterly results, though said trade tensions with could be a "headwind" next year.

Declining issues outnumbered advancers for a 5.72-to-1 ratio on the NYSE and a 4.29-to-1 ratio on the Nasdaq.

The S&P index recorded no new 52-week highs and 85 new lows, while the Nasdaq recorded four new highs and 277 new lows.

(Reporting by and in Bengaluru; Editing by and Shounak Dasgupta)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, October 26 2018. 21:13 IST