Home » News » ROUNDUP / New York stocks: recovery – countermovement after price slide

ROUNDUP / New York stocks: recovery – countermovement after price slide

NEW YORK (dpa-AFX) – After the sharp setback in the middle of the week, the US stock exchanges rose again, in some cases significantly, in a countermovement. The leading index Dow Jones Industrial last rose on Thursday by 1.77 percent to 30,839.96 points, after losing a good 2 percent in the middle of the week and falling to its lowest level since the beginning of the month.

The broader S&P 500 went up 1.63 percent to 3811.79 points on Thursday. Among the technology indices, the Nasdaq 100 rose 1.38 percent to 13,293.42 points.

Overall, robust economic data put people in a good mood on Wall Street. The number of weekly initial jobless claims fell surprisingly significantly.

The quarterly reports of some US heavyweights made for a topic of conversation. Apple shares fell more than two percent at the end of the Dow. The iPhone manufacturer drove a record profit in the Christmas quarter. In view of the historically high valuation of the papers, the upside potential is now exhausted, judged analyst David Vogt from the Swiss bank UBS.

Tesla’s shares also lost more than two percent. The statements of the manufacturer of electric cars about the deliveries this year are “vague”, complained analyst Brian Johnson of the Barclays Bank. Here the market has been waiting for more precise forecasts.

The shareholders of Facebook, however, could look forward to a plus of a good one percent. The world’s largest online network continued to grow unchecked during the pandemic.

At the top of the Nasdaq 100, American Airlines’ shares soared by around ten percent. The airline posted a smaller loss in the final quarter than had been expected by the market.

Meanwhile, the focus remained on the extraordinary price increases in the shares of the video game retailer Gamestop and other companies. The exchange supervisory authority and the Ministry of Finance are alarmed and calls for stricter regulation are getting louder because of the high risk of loss. Recently, shares of a number of troubled companies, against which professional investors such as hedge funds bet, have become objects of speculation for smaller investors who organize themselves on the Internet.

The Gamestop shares fluctuated very strongly this Thursday and recently plummeted by 64 percent. The papers of the world’s largest cinema chain AMC, which was recently considered a bankruptcy candidate, collapsed by 60 percent. An important reason for the countermovement on Thursday was that some trading platforms, such as the Robinhood app, which is popular with small investors, had temporarily excluded the companies because of the price volatility./la/he

– .

Leave a Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.