The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)
Stocks on two-day losing streak as health stocks fall
So that’s what a losing streak feels like. Stocks fell for the second day in a row Friday, which hadn’t happened in a month, as Amazon put a scare into yet another industry: medical device and health care equipment companies.
Those companies slumped after an analyst for Citi Investment Research said Amazon might be on the verge of shaking up their industry by speeding up distribution and cutting prices. Energy companies gave up some of their recent gains while retailers, media companies and household goods companies moved higher. Stocks finished the week with small losses, ending an eightweek winning streak.
One factor in those losses was uncertainty over the Republican plan to cut taxes. Stocks dipped
Thursday after Senate Republicans proposed leaving corporate tax rates alone in 2018 before cutting them in 2019. That surprised investors, who pulled
stocks down slightly from their recent record highs.
“We would expect a little bit more of that as we get more delays and uncertainty in the tax plan,” said Sean Lynch, the cohead of global equity strategy for Wells Fargo Investment Institute. Lynch said an eventual tax cut for companies, and for at least some individuals, would give investors “a dose of confidence” that company earnings will grow a bit faster and the economy and stock market will rise for a bit longer.
The Standard & Poor’s 500 index lost 2.32 points, or 0.1 percent, to 2,582.30. The Dow Jones industrial average slid 39.73 points, or 0.2 percent, to 23,422.21. The Nasdaq composite turned higher and rose 0.89 points to 6,750.94. The Russell 2000 index of smallercompany stocks inched up 0.26 points to 1,475.27.
The S&P 500 set an all-time high on Wednesday, but finished the week down 0.2 percent. The index had gained five percent over its winning streak, the longest in almost four years. The Russell 2000, which is comprised of smaller companies that might benefit more from a corporate tax cut, fell 1.3 percent this week. That was its largest loss in three months.
Citi Investment Research analyst Amit Hazan wrote Friday that Amazon is making quick progress in the medical supply field and could soon start distributing goods to hospitals, as some organizations appear interested in working with the online retail giant.
“New online distribution/ wholesaling models like Amazon’s will come to dominate the supply chain” in coming years, Hazan said.
Baxter International, which sells intravenous pumps and other hospital equipment, fell $1.35, or 2.1 percent, to $64.04. Becton, Dickinson dipped $5.25, or 2.3 percent, to $219.23. Medical device maker Medtronic slid $1.48, or 1.8 percent, to $79.33.