A rally on Wall Street slows; Priceline tanks
Topics: From the Wires, News
FILE - In a July 26, 2012 file photo trader Gregory Rowe, right, works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. Stronger corporate earnings reports and expectations that central banks will act to support the economy powered the Standard & Poor's 500 index past 1,400 Tuesday Aug. 7, 2012. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)(Credit: AP)A stock market rally lost steam Wednesday after mixed earnings from U.S. companies added to fears about Europe’s economic slowdown.
Several big consumer goods companies warned that weak demand in Europe was cutting into their revenue. That followed worrisome economic news from England, France and Germany, where economic growth had offset recessions in other European countries like Italy and Greece.
Major U.S. stock indexes rose modestly at midday. The Dow Jones industrial average added 22 points to 13,190. The Standard & Poor’s 500 index rose two to 1,403. The Nasdaq composite index gained two to 3,018.
The Dow had risen 290 points over the previous three trading days. On Tuesday, the S&P 500 passed 1,400 and the Nasdaq composite closed above 3,000, both for the first time since early May.
As stocks in New York traded tentatively, the dollar rose against the euro, a sign that investors are becoming more fearful.
“It’s not unusual for the market to pull back a bit after a strong move, absorb the latest earnings news and look to see the next catalyst to move higher,” Quincy Krosby, market strategist with Prudential Financial, said.
The market is being held back in part by reports from consumer-goods companies that weak sales in Europe are hurting revenue, Krosby said. Consumer discretionary stocks fell the most among the 10 industry groups in the S&P 500.
McDonalds fell $1.39, or 2 percent, to $87.62 after the company said a key revenue figure came in flat in July as the weakening global economy took a toll on customers of the world’s biggest burger chain.
Priceline.com fell more than $100 after warning investors late Tuesday that its third-quarter revenue and income would come in far below anlaysts’ forecasts because of the deepening malaise in Europe. Priceline’s stock sank $108.20, or 16 percent, to $571.54.
Priceline’s travails appeared to drag on other online travel sites. Expedia fell 6 percent; TripAdvisor lost 5 percent. The companies had the three biggest declines in the S&P 500 index.
Ralph Lauren fell $3.85, or 3 percent, to $149.18 after the company forecast a revenue decline in the current quarter and cautioned that the weak global economy might reduce spending on its clothes and housewares.
“It’s no longer a theoretical argument that Europe is hampering earnings for American companies,” Krosby said. “It’s a reality, and you’re seeing that today.”




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