Stocks trade lower after Apple says coronavirus outbreak will hurt sales

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U.S. stocks headed lower Tuesday after Apple Inc. said late Monday that the viral outbreak in China would hurt its second-quarter results, reigniting fears that the disease may disrupt manufacturing supply chains and have broad implications for the global economy and financial markets.

How are the benchmarks performing?

The Dow Jones Industrial Average












DJIA, -0.70%










 traded about 210 points, 0.7%, lower, near 29,187, while the S&P 500












SPX, -0.40%










 lost 14 points or 0.4% to trade near 3,366. The Nasdaq Composite Index












COMP, -0.16%










 was about 13 points, 0.1%, lower, near 9,718. Most of the Dow’s decline was attributed to downward pressure in shares of Apple and Intel Corp.












INTC, -1.88%,










according to Automated Insights. U.S. financial markets were closed Monday for the Presidents Day holiday.

The Dow on Friday booked a weekly gain of 1%, the S&P 500 finished the period with a gain 1.5%, while the Nasdaq Composite Index returned 2.2% for the week.

What’s driving the market?

Apple












AAPL, -2.07%










said Monday it won’t meet its second-quarter financial guidance because the coronavirus outbreak that originated in Hubei province in China last year is affecting its suppliers’ production. “The health and well-being of every person who helps make these products possible is our paramount priority, and we are working in close consultation with our suppliers and public health experts as this ramp continues,” the iPhone maker said in a statement.

Apple said revenue in the current quarter won’t reach its target range of between $63 billion and $67 billion due to the impact of the infectious disease.

Read: Apple’s coronavirus warning wasn’t a total surprise, but magnitude rattles Wall Street

The COVID-19 epidemic has sickened more than 73,000 people and claimed nearly 1,900 lives thus far.

The Chinese government postponed an annual political conclave in Beijing that had been scheduled for early March. Analysts predict the outbreak will dent China’s economic growth because of the country’s role as a manufacturing hub to much of the world.

U.S. markets, which have been primarily focused on corporate earnings and otherwise healthy economic data, have effectively shaken off worries fueled by the disease, but some strategists warn investors may be too dismissive.

“We haven’t really heard of any peak levels, that’s what’s beginning to sink into investors’ minds,” said Peter Cardillo, chief market strategist at Spartan Capital Securities in New York, about infection levels of the coronavirus.

“Also, we have gold prices soaring today,” he told MarketWatch, adding that precious metal could ascend even higher than $1,600 an ounce. “There are a lot of uncertainties and those uncertainties are weighing on the market.”

Still, as market technician Mark Newton put it, “for now, Equities haven’t deviated from their uptrend outside of just a minor two-week setback in mid-January.” In the year to date, the Dow is up 2.3%, the S&P 500 has gained 4.2%, and the Nasdaq is 8.3% higher.

“Non-technically, none of the concerns given the coronavirus outbreak, or earnings shortfalls really have seemed to matter all that much to shake the uptrend in stocks,” Newton noted. “Additionally, markets are heading full steam ahead into what appears to be a very divisive political season, and economic slowdown concerns nor trade uncertainty and tariffs really haven’t affected U.S. stock performance one bit.”

See: What Apple, Walmart and other U.S. companies are saying about the coronavirus

What’s more, the expected hit to U.S. manufacturing hasn’t been felt yet: a reading on manufacturing conditions in the New York area surged to a nine-month high in February, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York said Tuesday. The forward-looking new orders component of the index hit its highest in a year.

A closely watched reading about home builder confidence was also strong in February. The National Association of Home Builders’ monthly index hit 74, down one tick from January, but still marking the strongest start to a year on record. The sentiment tracker is considered an early read on the pace of new residential construction.

But the outlook for the embattled energy-services sector looks tougher. Dallas Federal Reserve President Robert Kaplan said Tuesday he expects this year to see “belt-tightening” and restructurings for companies in the U.S. oil and gas sector as domestic production growth is expected to decline.

Which stocks are in focus?
How are other assets performing?

The price of a barrel of West Texas Intermediate crude for March delivery












CLH20, -0.37%










traded 0.6% lower at $51.74 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, after gaining 3% last week.

Gold for April delivery












GCJ20, +1.09%










rose 1.1% to settle above $1,600 an ounce, its highest finish since March 2013, as investors flocked to haven assets.

The U.S. dollar












DXY, +0.41%










was 0.3% higher against a basket of rival currencies at 99.24.

The benchmark U.S. 10-year Treasury note












TMUBMUSD10Y, -2.09%










shed 3.9 basis points to 1.548%. The 30-year bond broke below 2%, a key psychological threshold. Bond yields fall when prices rise.

In Europe, the Stoxx Europe 600












SXXP, -0.38%










slipped 0.4%, while the FTSE 100












UKX, -0.69%










finished 0.7% lower.

In Asia overnight, the China CSI 300












000300, -0.49%










 ended 0.5% lower to close at 4.057.51, the Shanghai Composite












SHCOMP, +0.05%










 edged up less than 0.1% at 2,984.97, and the Hang Seng Index












HSI, -1.54%










closed 1.5% lower at 27,530.20. The Nikkei 225












NIK, -1.40%










lost 1.4% to 23,193.80.



Source : MTV