Stocks slide as Amazon, other large firms detail virus fallout
Stocks closed broadly lower Friday on Wall Street after Amazon and other big companies reported disappointing results, the latest evidence of how the coronavirus pandemic is hobbling the economy and hurting corporate earnings.
A day after closing out its best month since 1987, the S&P 500 fell 2.8%. The slide gave the benchmark index its second straight weekly loss.
The selling accelerated as the day went on, with energy stocks taking the biggest losses. Technology stocks and companies that rely on consumer spending accounted for a big slice of the decline.
Amazon sank 7.6% after it reported profit for the latest quarter that fell short of Wall Street’s forecasts. A sharp increase in costs related to providing deliveries safely during the pandemic outweighed a big increase in revenue. The retail giant’s movements have an outsized sway on the S&P 500 because it’s the third-largest company in the index.
“We all had these great expectations for Amazon,” said J.J. Kinahan, chief strategist with TD
Ameritrade. “The stock ran up amazingly because we were expecting their earnings to be good.”
The S&P 500 gave up 81.72 points to close at 2,830.71. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 622.03 points, or 2.6%, at 23,723.69. At one point, the index was down 700 points.
The Nasdaq, which is heavily weighed with tech stocks, slid 284.60 points, or 3.2%, to 8,604.95. The Russell 2000 index of smaller company stocks fell more than the rest of the market, shedding 50.18 points, or 3.8%, to 1,260.48.
Exxon Mobil’s latest results also weighed on the market. The oil producer fell 7.2% after it said that it swung to a loss of $610 million last quarter. It had to write down the value of its inventories by $2.9 billion amid a collapse in energy prices as airplanes, automobiles and workplaces worldwide suddenly went idle.
Wall Street has been bracing for a poor showing by companies this earnings season due to the economic shock from the virus. Many companies have pulled their earnings guidance for the rest of the year, citing uncertainty about how much of an impact the outbreak will have on their business and the economy, which is now in a recession.
“There’s an expectation that we’ll have a very difficult second quarter for [gross domestic product] and profits, and the third quarter will probably still be difficult,” said Jason Pride, chief investment officer of private wealth at Glenmede.
That has many analysts looking past the next few months and betting on a recovery by the end of this year or in 2021. “But that’s predicated on us not having a second wave of the outbreak,” Mr. Pride said.
Disappointing company results weren’t the only drag on stocks Friday. Shares of electric car and solar panel maker Tesla slid 10.3% after CEO Elon Musk tweeted that the price was too high.
Stocks rallied last month as economies around the world laid out plans to relax stay-at-home orders and hopes rose that a possible drug treatment for COVID-19 may be on the horizon.
The market posted sizable gains after the Federal Reserve and Congress announced aggressive measures to support markets and the economy. Stocks have now more than halved the sharp losses they took from its February record high into late March.