Business World

Wall Street closes lower on Amazon slump, prices

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WALL STREET slid on Friday to its deepest daily losses since 2020, as Amazon slumped after a gloomy quarterly report, and as the biggest surge in monthly inflation since 2005 spooked investors already worried about rising interest rates.

Amazon.com, Inc. tumbled by 14.05% in its steepest oneday drop since 2006, leaving the widely held stock near two-year low. Late on Thursday, the ecommerce giant delivered a disappoint­ing quarter and outlook, swamped by higher costs.

Apple, Inc., the world’s most valuable company, dropped 3.66% after its disappoint­ing outlook overshadow­ed record quarterly profit and sales.

All 11 S&P 500 sector indexes fell, led lower by a 5.9% slide in consumer discretion­ary and a 4.9% drop in real estate.

The S&P 500 logged its largest one-day decline since June 2020. The Nasdaq’s decline was its largest since September 2020.

Downbeat results and worries about aggressive monetary policy tightening by the Federal Reserve have hammered megacap technology and growth stocks this month.

The Fed is set to meet next week, with traders betting on a 50-basis-point rate hike to combat surging inflation.

Ahead of the weekend and the Fed meeting next week, “people are clearing the decks. The disappoint­ing guidance from Apple and Amazon and a few other companies set the stage yesterday for today to be weak and it accelerate­d as we ended out the day,” said Peter Tuz, President of Chase Investment Counsel in Charlottes­ville, Virginia.

The Nasdaq has lost about 13% in April, its worst monthly performanc­e since the global financial crisis in 2008.

The S&P 500 has fallen 13% so far in 2022, its steepest fourmonth decline to start any year since 1939.

Adding to fears on Wall Street, data showed the personal consumptio­n expenditur­es price index — the Fed’s favored measure of inflation — shot up 0.9% in March after climbing 0.5% in February.

Signs of aggressive monetary policy tightening, the Ukraine war and China’s COVID lockdowns have fueled fears of an economic slowdown. Data on Thursday showed the US economy unexpected­ly contracted in the first quarter.

The S&P 500 declined 3.63% to end the session at 4,131.93 points.

The Nasdaq declined 4.17% to 12,334.64 points, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average declined 2.77% to 32,977.21 points.

For the week, the S&P 500 lost 3.3%, the Nasdaq shed 3.9% and the Dow declined 2.5%.

The S&P 500 has gained or lost 2% or more in a day some 33 times so far in 2022, compared with 24 such days in all of 2021.

Exxon Mobil Corp. slipped 2.24% after it took a $3.4-billion writedown due to its exit from Russia. Chevron Corp. dropped 3.16% after its first-quarter profit underwhelm­ed.

The first-quarter earnings season overall has been better than expected so far. Nearly half of the S&P 500 companies have reported through Thursday and 81% of them have topped Wall Street’s expectatio­ns. Typically, only 66% beat estimates, according to Refinitiv data.

Declining issues outnumbere­d advancing ones on the NYSE by a 3.91-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 2.85to-1 ratio favored decliners.

The S&P 500 posted two new 52-week high and 47 new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 13 new highs and 385 new lows.

Volume on US exchanges was 12.4 billion shares, compared with an 11.8 billion average over the last 20 trading days. —

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