One major market index closed out the week at a fresh all-time high, but that was only part of the story on a Friday that saw COVID-19 creep back into Wall Street’s spotlight.
Several cyclical sectors, energy (-3.9%) and financials (-1.1%) foremost among them, strongly sold off today in reaction to an escalating wave of coronavirus cases.
“A number of countries [have reimposed] restrictions, with a number putting in place specific restrictions for those still unvaccinated,” says Deutsche Bank analyst Jonathan Jayarajan. “Austria has gone further still, imposing a full national lockdown starting on Monday, and announcing compulsory vaccinations from Feb. 1.” Health officials are considering new measures in Germany, too.
Oil and gas companies such as Exxon Mobil (XOM, -4.6%) and Occidental Petroleum (OXY, -5.0%) were hit particularly hard, with COVID concerns bringing U.S. crude oil prices down 3.7% to a six-week low of $76.11 per barrel.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average slumped 0.8% to 35,601, while the S&P 500 suffered a more modest pullback of 0.1% to 4,697.
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The Nasdaq Composite, however, closed Friday with a 0.4% gain to a record 16,057, driven in part by mega-caps Tesla (TSLA, +3.7%) and Nvidia (NVDA, +4.1%). The former surged after Wedbush analyst Dan Ives raised his price target by 27% to $1,400 per share, while the latter continued to rise in the wake of Wednesday’s Street-beating Q3 earnings report.
Other news in the stock market today:
- The small-cap Russell 2000 slipped again, shedding 0.9% to 2,343.
- Gold futures slipped 0.5% to finish at $1,851.60 an ounce.
- The CBOE Volatility Index (VIX) headed 2.3% higher to 17.99.
- Bitcoin lost a little ground, declining 0.2% to $57,858.19. (Bitcoin trades 24 hours a day; prices reported here are as of 4 p.m. each trading day.)
- Farfetch (FTCH) slumped 13.9% after earnings. In its third quarter, the U.K.-based online luxury retailer reported a narrower-than-expected adjusted loss of 14 cents per share, but revenue of $582.6 million fell short of the consensus estimate. The company also reported lower-than-anticipated gross merchandise volume (GMV) for its digital platform business and cut its current-quarter and full-year GMV forecasts for the unit. Still, Credit Suisse analyst Stephen Ju maintained an Outperform (Buy) rating on the stock. “Management noted inventory levels remain healthy and demand has been improving throughout the fourth quarter,” Ju says. “In addition, contribution margins should improve to 30%-35% in Q4 (vs 27% in Q3) as demand generation expense moderates and shipping costs are passed to the consumer.”
- Foot Locker (FL) this morning reported third-quarter adjusted earnings of $1.93 per share and revenue of $2.19 billion, more than the $1.37 per share and $2.15 billion analysts were expecting. However, FL stock fell 12.0% today after Andrew Page, chief financial officer for the athletic apparel retailer, said in today’s earnings call that the company expects “global supply chain constraints, including factory shutdowns and port congestion to continue to be a headwind through the fourth quarter and into 2022.” CFRA Research analyst Zachary Warring maintained his Hold rating on the stock in the wake of earnings. “In a retail environment where many companies are experiencing massive top-line growth, FL continues to struggle,” he wrote in a note. “We see plenty of better opportunities in the space and expect FL sales to remain flat to down over the long-term.”
The 30 Best Stocks of the Past 30 Years
“You could invest in ‘the next Apple’ or ‘the next Tesla.'” Chances are, if you read enough financial media, you’ve been exposed to this phrase at least once, if not a few hundred times.
The reason is obvious: It creates a mental connection to stocks that have delivered mindblowing returns since coming public, minting numerous millionaires along the way.
But tech superstars aren’t the only path to riches.
Hendrik Bessembinder, a finance professor at the W.P. Carey School of Business at Arizona State University, has produced a study showing that the top-performing 2.4% of firms account for all of the $75.7 trillion in net global stock market wealth created between January 1990 and December 2020 – and those outperforming stocks come from a wide spectrum of industries.
In our “30 Best Stocks of the Past 30 Years,” we look at the 30 stocks from around the globe that Bessembinder identified as having generated the most wealth for shareholders. While a number of technology dynamos are on the list, so too are several less flashy companies that used both market returns and consistent dividends to richly reward investors over time.
Kyle Woodley was long NVDA and TSLA as of this writing.
Source: kiplinger.com