Wednesday, January 14, 2015

Stocks plunge as retail sales, JPMorgan disappoint – USA TODAY

If you're not a fan of steep drops and sharp climbs of roller coasters, you might want to reconsider your full participation in the market, as stocks have taken investors on a wild ride so far this year. Image courtesy Six Flags jason

Video Transcript

Automatically Generated Transcript (may not be 100% accurate)

00:00 Fasten your seatbelts the stock market is behaving badly again.
00:04 Kyle Adams shell and this is America’s markets yeah. If you’re
00:13 not a fan of Steve drops and sharp climes of roller
00:16 coasters. You might want to reconsider your full participation in the
00:20 market. As stocks have taken investors on a wild ride so
00:23 far this year. Yesterday’s up and down day reinforced the idea
00:28 that this is going to be a volatile year. The Dow
00:31 is up 280 points that I was down more than a
00:34 140 points before closing 27 points lower. And last week the
00:39 Dow closed up or down more than 100 points every day
00:43 and it doesn’t look like the market is ready to come
00:45 down today. And early trading the Dow was diving again. It
00:49 was down by more than 200 points in early trading. What’s
00:53 causing the fall today. A surprising decline in December retail sales
00:57 and an airing this from banking giant JPMorga n Chase. Add to
01:01 that worries such as global growth fears plunging oil and copper
01:05 prices. Investors are also worried about rate hikes from the Federal
01:09 Reserve later this year. This planning on the markets play for
01:12 the moment the message of the market it’s clear volatility. Is

Stocks tumbled in early trading Wednesday after a weak reading on December retail sales and a profit miss from JPMorgan added to investor worries.

Hurting the Dow was a fourth-quarter earnings miss from Dow component JPMorgan Chase (JPM). The bank posted earnings per share of $ 1.19, far below the $ 1.31 analysts’ expected. JPMorgan’s revenue number also came in light.

Adding to the gloom, December retail sales contracted 0.9% from a year ago, falling far below the 0.1% gain expected.

The Dow Jones industrial average was down more than 200 points, or 1.4% in morning trading. The Standard & Poor’s 500 fell 1.1% and the Nasdaq composite index dropped 0.7%.

It’s been a volatile start to the year for the Dow. Tuesday, it suffered a point swing of nearly 425 points. It was up as much as 282 points before heading south and tumbling as much as 143 points. It closed down 27 points at 17,614, leaving it down 1.2% for the year and 2.4% below its Dec. 26 peak.

AMERICA’S MARKETS: Live markets blog

More turmoil in the commodities space is also weighing on investors Wednesday, as is a global growth downgrade from the World Bank for 2015. The World Bank now expects global growth of 3% this year vs. an initial estimate of 3.4%. The downgrade is due mainly to weakness in the eurozone and emerging markets.

“Oil continues to weigh on global investor sentiment,” says Alex Eppstein of Schaeffere’s Investment research. “Also in focus today is copper, as fresh 5.5-year low in the commodity — as well as a downwardly revised international growth outlook for this year and next from the World Bank — has precipitated a sell-off in mining stocks.

Overseas, European markets alsp plunged. Britain’s FTSE index was down 2.3% and Germany’s DAX index fell 1%.

Asian shares sank as Japan’s Nikkei 225 index dropped 1.7% and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index fell 0.4%.

Oil prices rose slightly Wednesday as benchmark U.S. crude was up 0.2% to about $ 46 a barrel.

On Tuesday, the Dow ended a bit in the red Tuesday after a wild, 400-point swing. It finished down 0.2% — about 27 points — after being up about 281 points and down about 120 at one point. The Standard & Poor’s 500 index lost 0.3% — a little more than 5 points — after being up as much as 30 points. The Nasdaq composite index dropped 0.1%.

Contributing: The Associated Press

Read or Share this story: http://usat.ly/1C0wq0B

LikeTweet

No comments:

Post a Comment