While you were sleeping: Best Buy, Citigroup falter
Jan 17 (BusinessDesk) – Wall Street slid as US companies including Best Buy and Citigroup reported results that fell
short of expectations, fuelling concern some valuations are not justified by the outlook.
In afternoon trading in New York today, the Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 0.43 percent, the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index fell 0.24 percent, while the Nasdaq Composite Index edged 0.04 percent lower. Slides in shares of
Wal-Mart, last down 1.1 percent, and those of Chevron, last 0.3 percent weaker, led declines in the Dow.
Shares of Best Buy got pummeled, last down 28 percent, after the company reported a drop in US holiday sales and said
fourth-quarter operating margins will be lower than last year.
“[O]ur holiday revenues were negatively impacted by a number of factors, including: the aggressive promotional activity
in the retail industry during the holiday period, which we believe did not result in higher industry demand and had a
deflationary impact on our revenue; supply constraints for key products; significant store traffic declines between
“Power Week” and Christmas; and a disappointing mobile phone market,” Best Buy President and CEO Hubert Joly said in a
statement.
Other companies reporting earnings that missed the mark included Citigroup, pushing shares down 4.4 percent.
First-time jobless claims dropped by 2,000 to 326,000 in the week ended January 11, from a revised 328,000 in the
previous week, according to Labor Department data. A separate Labor Department report showed the consumer price index
rose 0.3 percent in December.
"The outlook for 2014 remains good," Chris Rupkey, chief financial economist at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ in New
York, told Reuters. “The economy is not generating much inflation at the moment, but this is no reason to doubt its
vitality.”
Other reports showed the Philadelphia Federal Reserve Bank’s business activity index rose to 9.4 points in January, up
from 6.4 in December, while the NAHB/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index slipped to 56 points in January, from a downwardly
revised 57 in December.
“Following an unexpected jump last month, builder confidence has essentially leveled out and is holding at a solid
level,” NAHB Chairman Rick Judson, a home builder from Charlotte, North Carolina, said in a statement. “Many markets
continue to improve and this bodes well for future home sales.”
Optimism reigns for the global economic outlook in the year ahead. The world economy will grow 3.6 percent this year
compared with 2.9 percent in 2013, according to a Reuters poll of about 300 economists.
In Europe, the Stoxx 600 Index finished the session 0.2 percent down from the previous close, which was the highest
level in six years. The UK’s FTSE 100 slipped almost 0.1 percent, Germany’s DAX gave up 0.2 percent, while France’s CAC
40 fell 0.3 percent.
A report showed that annual inflation in the euro zone was 0.8 percent in December, compared with 0.9 percent in
November, while a separate report showed inflation in Germany was 1.2 percent last month, compared with1.6 percent the
previous month.
The Turkish lira slid to a record low against the greenback, falling as much as 1 percent 2.2124 per dollar, according
to Bloomberg.
"We are seeing the most serious challenge for the government through their period of rule, over a decade now," Gokce
Celik, analyst at Finansbank, told Reuters. "As the accusations draw closer to the inner circle [of the ruling AK Party]
they arouse more concerns regarding political stability especially in the run-up to local elections in just over two
months."
(BusinessDesk)