Dow up, S&P 500 flat and Nasdaq heading for first back-to-back weekly loss of year

‘There’s a growing realization that we have no revenue growth,’ says Schwab’s Liz Ann Sounders.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average was clinging to a modest gain Friday, while the S&P 500 index and Nasdaq Composite looked likely to cap off a second straight weekly loss.

What’s happening

  • The Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA was up 127 points, or 0.4%, to 35,299.
  • The S&P 500 SPX was flat around 4,469.
  • The Nasdaq Composite COMP shed 67 points, or 0.5%, to 13,670.

The Dow was up 0.7% for the week, while the S&P 500 was down 0.2% on a weekly basis, according to FactSet data. The Nasdaq Composite was heading for its first back-to-back weekly losses in 2023.

What’s driving markets

U.S. stock indexes slipped Friday, a trend that’s taken hold in mid-August as technology shares slump, longer-dated Treasury yields rise, and investors consider if corporate earnings can hold up through the rest of this year.

“I think it’s a confluence of things,” said Liz Ann Sonders, chief investment strategist at Charles Schwab & Co., in a phone call Friday. “There’s a growing realization that we have no revenue growth,” and the many companies have been beating earnings estimates because of cost cutting, she said.

Cracks in commercial real-estate and recent jobs also don’t help, Sonders said, or Fitch Ratings downgrade of the U.S. or Moody’s Investors Service cutting its ratings on a string of regional banks.

“On balance, earnings haven’t been as bad as feared, but they’ve hardly been inspiring,” said Josh Jamner, ClearBridge Investments, adding that a broad-based theme from second-quarter earnings reports has been one of margin pressure, as higher interest rates from the Federal Reserve and a rebound in commodity prices take hold.

“Margin pressure is likely to continue,” Jamner said Friday. “That’s not baked into stocks.”

Fears about the potential for inflation to creep back up in the next few months was on the radar Friday, after the U.S. producer-price index rose 0.3% in July. It followed Thursday’s promising report on consumer prices, which showed price growth was subdued at 0.2% for the second month in a row in July.

Friday’s PPI data, combined with a lackluster reading on consumer sentiment from the University of Michigan, helped rattle investors who have become too optimistic about the outlook for the U.S. economy and the Federal Reserve’s plans, said Gene Goldman, CIO of Cetera Investments.

Goldman pointed to volatility, including the S&P 500’s recent trend of surrendering weekly gains heading in the final stretch of trading, suggesting that investors are nervous about holding stock-market exposure over the weekend.

“The market has been ignoring all the bad news out there, they’ve been too optimistic about a soft landing,” Goldman said during a phone interview with MarketWatch. “The fact that stocks sold off again on Friday afternoon to me screams ‘uncertainty.’”

UMich sentiment data on Friday showed consumers’ outlook on the economy soured slightly since the beginning of August, while expectations for inflation over the next five years declined to 2.9% from 3%.

Rising Treasury yields also added to the pressure on stocks. The 10-year note BX:TMUBMUSD10Y yield was up 5 basis points at 4.16% in recent trade.

An auction of 30-year bonds BX:TMUBMUSD30Y didn’t elicit demand as strong as the 3- BX:TMUBMUSD03Y and 10-year note auctions of the previous two days.

Schwab’s Sonders said a focus next week will be data on U.S. retail sales, housing data and initial jobless claims.

Companies in focus

—Steve Goldstein contributed to this article

https://www.marketwatch.com/story/u-s-stock-futures-pause-as-traders-wait-to-see-if-ppi-data-moves-markets-in-a-way-cpi-did-not-2855e1e6?mod=mw_latestnews