| Read in Browser |
|
| Top News Shutterstock Stocks rallied Friday to close a volatile week, as U.S. Treasury yields pulled back from their recent highs and economic data helped investors look past the growing likelihood that the Federal Reserve will keep its restrictive policy in place for longer than anticipated. The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury settled back below 4%, shedding 11 basis points to 3.96%, and the two-year yield fell five basis points to 4.86%. U.S. economic data released Friday showed better than expected demand for services in February, new orders rose to the highest level in more than a year, and hiring increased. The three major stock market indexes rose for the week, with the Dow Jones adding 1.7% to snap a four-week losing streak, the S&P 500 closing 1.9% higher, and the Nasdaq gaining 2.6%. Check out Seeking Alpha's Catalyst Watch for a preview of next week's big events. | | Featured What can $5 buy you at the mall today? Not much. But if you choose wisely, $5 can make a big difference to how you invest. Seeking Alpha Premium is the best source of analysis for almost any investment out there - not only the trending tickers. Thanks to Seeking Alpha's diverse pool of contributors and community debate, you get the bull and the bear perspective on 1000s of stocks. You'll be able to make the most informed buy, hold or sell decisions for your portfolio. Right now you can join Premium for the incredibly low price of $4.95 for your first 30 days. (You can cancel within the first 30 days, after which your annual subscription will kick in at $239 per year.) Get the edge you need to win by joining the leading community of engaged investors today. Go Premium nowIntroductory offer for new subscribers only. After 30 days, $239 will be charged automatically for an annual subscription. Auto-renews as annual subscription at the then current annual list price. Past performance is no guarantee of future results. | | Media "The corporate kingdom finally comes to an end," Florida Governor Ron DeSantis declared on Monday, after signing a bill that gives the state control over Walt Disney World's (NYSE: DIS) self-governing district. The move was a long time coming, and follows the "Don't Say Gay" tussle between Disney and Florida's legislature last year ( see more on the controversy here). DeSantis will be able to appoint a five-member board that will have external oversight over the Reedy Creek Improvement District, which has its own tax and bond authority, and it will no longer be exempt from certain state codes and regulations. The "new red tape may dissuade DIS' new infrastructure investments in Florida for the intermediate term," SA contributor Juxtaposed Ideas wrote in an article that discussed other impacts on the company's theme parks. ( 285 comments) | | | | | | Events The jury is still out on Tesla's (NASDAQ: TSLA) Investor Day event at its Gigafactory in Austin, Texas. Elon Musk started off his "Master Plan Part 3" by talking about the clear path to a fully sustainable Earth, highlighting the dirty and wasteful energy economy that is currently in place, but investors were underwhelmed by the presentation, sending the stock down nearly 6% in AH trading on Wednesday. The future of Full Self-Driving, a robotaxi network, and charging infrastructure was also discussed in broad strokes, and while a "next generation" electric-vehicle platform was announced, it didn't include too many details. Note that Tesla shares have been on rip since investors welcomed in 2023 - sending the stock up 90% YTD - and those betting against the volatile stock have, at times, found themselves in the opposite lane facing traffic. ( 240 comments) | | Financials Another high-profile investor day was broadcast earlier in the week. CEO David Solomon took the podium to discuss the latest happenings at Goldman Sachs ( GS), but ended up getting some flak over the Wall Street stalwart's foray into the consumer arena. The business has resulted in billions of dollars in losses over the past few years, and Goldman is now exploring strategic alternatives for its Platform Solutions unit. It's also in the process of selling some loans in its Marcus consumer bank portfolio, as well as evaluating the sale of installment lending platform GreenSky. Solomon had sought to diversify Goldman's revenue stream away from traditional businesses like investment banking, but his lack of answers saw the stock dive 4% by the end of his presentation. ( 7 comments) | | U.S. Indices Dow +1.8% to 33,391. S&P 500 +1.9% to 4,046. Nasdaq +2.6% to 11,689. Russell 2000 +2% to 1,928. CBOE Volatility Index -14.7% to 18.49.
S&P 500 Sectors Consumer Staples -0.4%. Utilities -0.7%. Financials +0.8%. Telecom +3.3%. Healthcare +0.5%. Industrials +3.3%. Information Technology +2.9%. Materials +4%. Energy +2.9%. Consumer Discretionary +1.6%. Real Estate +1.6%.
World Indices London +0.9% to 7,947. France +2.2% to 7,348. Germany +2.4% to 15,578. Japan +1.7% to 27,927. China +1.9% to 3,328. Hong Kong +2.8% to 20,568. India +0.6% to 59,809.
Commodities and Bonds Crude Oil WTI +4.6% to $79.85/bbl. Gold +3% to $1,862.8/oz. Natural Gas +23.1% to 3.016. Ten-Year Bond Yield -0.2 bps to 3.958.
Forex and Cryptos EUR/USD +0.85%. USD/JPY -0.43%. GBP/USD +0.81%. Bitcoin -3.5%. Litecoin -3%. Ethereum -1.4%. XRP -0.6%.
Top S&P 500 Gainers First Solar (FSLR) +30%. Salesforce (CRM) +15%. Steel Dynamics (STLD) +15%. DENTSPLY SIRONA (XRAY) +13%. Illumina (ILMN) +13%.
Top S&P 500 Losers DISH Network (DISH) -15%. Universal Health Services (UHS) -13%. Lumen Technologies (LUMN) -11%. Hormel Foods (HRL) -10%. Bath & Body Works (BBWI) -7%.
Where will the markets be headed next week? Current trends and ideas? Add your thoughts to the comments section. | | Seeking Alpha's Wall Street Breakfast Podcast Seeking Alpha's Wall Street Breakfast podcast brings you all the news you need to know for your market day. Released by 8:00 AM ET each morning, it is a quick listen that you can put on as you get ready to start your working day. | | | | |
No comments:
Post a Comment