Large US banks bested earnings expectations this week, but stocks still lost ground due to worries about high equity valuations and the Greek debt crisis.
US stocks looked headed for another week of gains before deep losses on Friday pushed the market into the red.
For the week, the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 231.35 points (1.28 percent) to 17,826.30.
The broad-based S&P 500 declined 20.88 (0.99 percent) to 2,081.18, while the tech-rich NASDAQ Composite Index dropped 64.17 (1.28 percent) to 4,931.81.
Wunderlich Securities chief market strategist Art Hogan said investor sentiment is “cautious,” in part because stocks are still so fully valued.
“Sentiment probably gets better at lower” valuations, he said.
Earnings have so far been “better than very low expectations,” Hogan said. “Next week, we’ll have a much better read of a broader swath of corporate America.”
Among the large banks, standouts included JPMorgan Chase, which rode strong gains in investment banking and trading to net income of US$5.9 billion in the first quarter, an increase of 12.2 percent from a year ago.
“We have an outstanding franchise which is getting safer and stronger, and is gaining market share over time,” JPMorgan chief executive officer Jamie Dimon said, implicitly rebutting calls from politicians and some financial analysts to break up the largest US bank by assets.
Goldman Sachs also racked up strong results, with first-quarter profits rising 40 percent from a year ago to US$2.7 billion. Bank of America returned to profitability after a loss in the year-ago period, while Wells Fargo’s profits edged lower, but bested analyst forecasts.
However, Hogan said that investors remain jittery about the strong US dollar, as evidenced by American Express, which cited the strong greenback as a drag on results.
Investors are also gearing up for painful results from energy companies hit by crashing oil prices, he added.
Earnings from energy companies in the S&P 500 are projected to fall 65.6 percent, with profits falling 2.6 percent for the index as a whole, according to S&P Capital IQ. Some of the week’s most important economic data showed improvement in the US, but not by as much as expected.
US retail sales rebounded last month from a three-month slump, rising 0.9 percent. New construction of homes in the US rose 2 percent to an annual rate of 926,000 units, missing estimates.
The week’s biggest move in stocks came on Friday, with the Dow slumping 1.54 percent, as uncertainty about Greece roiled European markets and dominated the IMF and World Bank spring meetings in Washington.
Negotiations between Greece and international creditors resumed yesterday in Brussels on reform requirements Athens needs to meet to receive its last payment of its bailout funds.
Late on Friday, US Secretary of the Treasury Jack Lew called for parties to reach agreement.
“Not reaching agreement would create immediate hardship for Greece, and uncertainties for Europe and the global economy more broadly,” Lew said.
Next week’s agenda includes a flood of earnings reports, including from Boeing, Verizon, Lockheed Martin, Caterpillar, Microsoft and Google. Interest will be especially high in multinationals that sell consumer products. Companies like Coca-Cola, McDonald’s, Procter & Gamble and Kimberly-Clark will be scrutinized for signs of a drag from the strong dollar.
Economic reports next week include last month’s data on sales of new and existing-homes and durable goods orders.
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