While you were sleeping: Dow bounces back on earnings lift, Nasdaq down
Updated: Corporate results drive US market; ECB to scale back bond-buying programme
Updated: Corporate results drive US market; ECB to scale back bond-buying programme
Wall Street was mixed amid better-than-expected corporate earnings including from DowDuPont.
IAt the close of trading in New York, the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 71.40 points, or 0.3%, to 23,4000.86. The Nasdaq Composite Index eased 0.1% to 6556.77, while the Standard & Poor's 500 Index gained 0.1% to 2560.40.
"That was a nice change of pace from yesterday [when the Dow fell 112 points], where we had that slight sell-off in the markets due to some bad earnings," Brian Jacobsen, chief portfolio strategist at Wells Fargo Funds Management in Wisconsin, told Bloomberg. "And I think that's actually a positive thing, that earnings still matter."
The Dow moved higher as gains by Nike and DowDuPont, up 3.9% and 3.4% respectively, outweighed declines in 3M and General Electric, down 2% and 1.2% respectively.
"It's not terribly popular to be saying it makes sense the markets are hitting new highs, but I look and I see a good economic backdrop, I see earnings growth and I see central banks basically managing quite well on the exit," Ron Temple, Head of US Equities and Co-Head of Multi Asset Investing at Lazard Asset Management in New York, told Reuters.
ECB to scale back
The European Central Bank announced it would cut its monthly pace of asset purchases by €30 billion from January 2018 until the end of September, "or beyond, if necessary," while maintaining its current rate €60 billion euros a month until the end of this year.
"The recalibration of our asset purchases reflects growing confidence in the gradual convergence of inflation rates towards our inflation aim, on account of the increasingly robust and broad-based economic expansion, an uptick in measures of underlying inflation and the continued effective pass-through of our policy measures to the financing conditions of the real economy," ECB President Mario Draghi said in prepared remarks for reporters in Frankfurt.
Europe's Stoxx 600 Index rose 1.1%. The UK's FTSE 100 Index rose 0.5%, Germany's DAX Index rallied 1.4% and France's CAC 40 Index climbed 1.5%.
Shares of Anheuser-Busch InBev fell 0.7% in Brussels after the world's largest brewer report weaker-than-expected beer sales amid a decline in market shares in the US. The Belgium-based company said beer volume declined 1.5% in the third quarter from the year-earlier period.
"Continued strong growth in Mexico, Argentina, and Africa was more than offset by soft shipment volumes in the US, primarily driven by the substantial weather impact in many parts of the country, and Brazil," the company said in a statement.
Some analysts said weather wasn't the only cause for US weakness.
"Our view remains that unless and until AB InBev can get volumes growing sustainably the business model will remain under significant pressure,"James Edwardes Jones, analyst at RBC Capital Markets, told Reuters.
Bayer slices Monsanto deal
Meanwhile, Germany's Bayer has cut the value of its takeover of Monsanto by $US2.5 billion, which combined with windfalls from asset sales means it may have to raise less than expected from shareholders, Reuters reported.
The Monsanto deal is now valued at $US63.5 billion including debt, down from an initial $US66 billion, because the US seeds giant had lowered its financial liabilities, Bayer's finance chief said on Thursday, according to Reuters.
Bayer said in September 2016 when the deal was announced that it would raise $US19 billion worth of fresh equity capital, some of which would be €4 billion in mandatory convertible notes issued in November 2016. Analysts had expected Bayer's cash call to be around $US12 billion, but estimates have since dropped below $US10 billion, according to Reuters.
"We will examine whether and to what extent the equity component of the financing will change," Bayer Chief Executive Werner Baumann, the deal's main architect, said on Thursday, Reuters reported.
Bayer shares closed 1.6% weaker in Frankfurt.
(BusinessDesk)