Your current location is:{Current column} >>Text
Stock market today: Dow ends lower as Micron
{Current column}37People have watched
IntroductionBy Yasin Ebrahim ...
By Yasin Ebrahim
-- The good trade foreign exchange platformDow slumped Thursday as Micron-led plunge in tech reined in bullish optimism, putting stocks on course to snap their two-day win streak.
The fell 1.05%, or 349 points, the slumped 2.2%, and the slipped 1.4%.
Micron Technology Inc (NASDAQ:) plunged more than 3% after reporting that missed on the top and bottom line as gloomy macroeconomic background continued to weigh on demand.
While the chip maker's outlook for the fiscal second quarter was “soft”, Deutsche Bank says, there is a risk for more downside as Micron’s estimates point to a demand recovery toward mid-CY23, which “seems optimistic.”
The results from Micron sent chip stocks sharply lower, with (NASDAQ:), Applied Materials Inc (NASDAQ:) and Advanced Micro Devices (NASDAQ:) down heavy on the day.
Consumer stocks continued to be weighed down by an ongoing drop in Tesla (NASDAQ:), taking total losses to about 27% over the last six weeks amid growing demand concerns. Tesla doubled U.S. discounts on key models including the Model 3 and Model Y EVs in an effort to boost sales.
CarMax (NYSE:) also contributed to the wobble in consumer stocks after falling 3% as the automaker’s fell short of Wall Street estimates.
Industrials were also down more than 1%, dragged lower by (NYSE:) and other airline stocks. Airlines including American Airlines (NASDAQ:), Southwest Airlines (NYSE:), and Delta Air Lines (NYSE:) canceled hundreds of flights this week as winter storms are set to wreak havoc ahead of a busy Christmas weekend.
Sentiment on stocks was also soured by data showing the U.S. economy growth in the third quarter was revised higher, potentially encouraging the Fed to lean more hawkish on monetary policy.
The Commerce Department’s final reading of quarter for the third quarter showed the economy grew 3.2%, above the prior reading of 2.9% last month.
The job market, meanwhile, remained tight as fell less than expected last week.
“The labor market remains very tight,” Jefferies said in a note. “We expect that it will soften eventually, but it is starting from a very significant position of strength, and it will take a little while longer for the cracks to form.”
Statement: The content of this article does not represent the views of FTI website. The content is for reference only and does not constitute investment suggestions. Investment is risky, so you should be careful in your choice! If it involves content, copyright and other issues, please contact us and we will make adjustments at the first time!Tags:
Related articles
Tear gas taints the air as TotalEnergies AGM rejects climate activist resolution By Reuters
{Current column}By Benjamin Mallet and America HernandezPARIS (Reuters) - TotalEnergies shareholders rejected an act ...
Read moreBig Short’s Michael Burry sees no “true danger” from SVB crisis By
{Current column}By Ambar Warrick --Hedge fund manager Michael Burry, who had famously shorted the 2008 subprime mort ...
Read moreMoody's downgrades Signature Bank to junk, places six U.S. banks under review By Reuters
{Current column}(Reuters) - Ratings agency Moody's (NYSE:) on Monday downgraded the debt ratings of collapsed New Yo ...
Read more
Popular Articles
- U.S. shares with European banks ways Russia is evading sanctions By Reuters
- Charles Schwab shares bought by CEO, Baron Capital
- U.S. stocks lifted by bank rally as traders bet on smaller rate hike By
- U.S. stocks fall as Credit Suisse adds more pressure to bank group By
- Fed's Mester says not yet at point where it can 'hold' rates By Reuters
- Dow futures tick lower, CPI eases By
Latest articles
-
Australia retail sales level off in Feb as shoppers rein in spending By Reuters
-
UK finance minister and Bank of England work to contain SVB fallout By Reuters
-
Junle CapitalTrading Is Safe?Company Abbreviation Junle Capital
-
Swiss National Bank pledges support for Credit Suisse if needed By
-
Telecom stocks tumble on report Amazon is in talks to offer mobile service to U.S. Prime subs By
-
Gold prices surge as U.S. bank woes taper rate hike expectations By