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Home Latest News

Stocks Extend Losses as Meta’s Disappointing Profit Weighs on Tech

2022-02-03
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Stocks Extend Losses as Meta’s Disappointing Profit Weighs on Tech
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Major U.S. stock indexes tumbled on Thursday, dragged down by technology and social-media companies, as

Facebook

owner Meta Platforms plunged after a disappointing earnings report.

The tech-focused Nasdaq Composite Index dropped 538.73 points, or 3.7%, to 13878.82, breaking a four-day winning streak and posting its largest one-day decline since September 2020.

The S&P 500 fell 111.94, or 2.4%, to 4477.44. It was the broad market index’s biggest daily drop in percentage terms in nearly a year. The Dow Jones Industrial Average declined 518.17, or 1.5%, to close at 35111.16.

Meta’s stock price slid $85.40, or 26%, to $237.60 after the social-media giant startled investors with a sharper-than-expected decline in profit and a gloomy outlook.

Other tech and social-media stocks sold off in Meta’s wake. Spotify Technology shares sank $32.16, or 17%, to $159.76 after the streaming company declined to issue annual guidance, spooking investors. Chip maker

Nvidia

lost $12.94 a share, or 5.1%, to close at $239.48.

Thursday’s tumble erased recent gains in the Nasdaq and threatened to resume a selloff that battered U.S. stocks during the first few weeks of the year. As the Federal Reserve has moved toward raising interest rates to combat inflation, investors have fled risky assets such as tech stocks, which had benefited from low rates. The Nasdaq is down more than 12% so far this year, while the S&P 500 is down nearly 7%.

Money managers are pivoting toward sectors including energy and banking they say stand to benefit from the economic recovery and higher borrowing costs.

“Investors are going in a short space of time from almost a perfect environment for risk assets to a more normal environment,” said

Nicholas Brooks,

head of economic and investment research at

Intermediate Capital Group.

“Companies that benefited most from that dramatic easing in monetary policy would be more vulnerable to large selloffs if there are any disappointment in their earnings.”

Amateur investors took the stock market by storm a year ago, buying up shares of meme stocks like GameStop and AMC Entertainment. Many remember it as a revolution against Wall Street, but in the end, they largely just lined the pockets of major financial firms. WSJ’s Dion Rabouin explains. Illustration: Sebastian Vega

Markets were also rattled by an increasingly hawkish tone from global central banks. The Bank of England pressed ahead with raising borrowing costs Thursday, nudging up its policy rate to 0.5% from 0.25%. In Frankfurt, the European Central Bank kept its key interest rates unchanged, but ECB President

Christine Lagarde

signaled concern about inflation and opened the door to a possible rate hike later this year.

The euro jumped on her remarks, strengthening 1.1% against the dollar to $1.1435, while European government bond yields jumped. The pan-continental Stoxx Europe 600 slid 1.8%, its worst day in more than a month.

The news from overseas contributed to the U.S. selloff, said

Chris Senyek,

chief investment strategist at Wolfe Research. “Global yields are pushing higher, which is putting downward pressure on valuations across the market,” he said.

Rising interest rates hurt the share price of fast-growing tech companies by reducing the value that investors place on their future earnings. Markets have been volatile in recent weeks as expectations have mounted that the Fed will act aggressively to hike rates, while corporate earnings reports from Big Tech have been hit-or-miss.

Apple

and

Microsoft

both posted strong quarterly results last week, boosting investor sentiment. But Meta, previously known as Facebook, fell sharply after posting its first earnings report since Chief Executive

Mark Zuckerberg

outlined a pivot to the metaverse. The company said it expected revenue growth to slow because users were spending less time on its more lucrative services.

PayPal

shares lost one-quarter of their value on Wednesday after the payments company lowered its profit outlook. They continued to fall on Thursday, declining $8.27 a share, or 6.2%, to $124.30.

“I think it was a bit more of a wake-up call for the market that some of these stocks can’t keep up on this trajectory,” said

Altaf Kassam,

head of investment strategy and research for Europe, the Middle East and Africa at State Street Global Advisors.

Several tech and social-media companies tumbled on Thursday, only to rebound in after-hours trading after reporting quarterly results.

Snap

slid $7.57 per share, or 24%, to close at $24.50.

Pinterest

shares dropped $2.82, or 10%, to $24.51.

Amazon.com

shares dropped $235.34, or 7.8%, to $2,776.91. All three stocks posted double-digit gains in post-4 p.m. ET trading.

Shares of

T-Mobile US

jumped $11.20, or 10%, to $120.78 after the telecommunications company topped analysts’ profit forecasts. Despite that, the S&P 500’s communications-services sector shed 6.8%, making it the index’s worst-performing sector, as it was pulled down by stocks like Meta and

Twitter.

Money managers are pivoting toward sectors they say stand to benefit from higher borrowing costs.



Photo:

Allie Joseph/Associated Press

In commodities, front-month U.S. oil futures rose 2.3% to settle at $90.27 per barrel, the first time the benchmark had topped $90 since October 2014. Crude prices have climbed this week as U.S. crude inventories have declined, a sign of tight supplies, while the threat of conflict between Russia and Ukraine has unsettled global energy markets.

On the economic front, initial claims for jobless benefits fell to 238,000 in the week through Jan. 29. Claims hit a record low in early December as businesses held on to more workers amid a persistent labor shortage.

In the bond market, the yield on benchmark Treasury notes climbed to 1.825% from 1.765% on Wednesday. Bond yields move in the opposite direction from prices.

In Asia, Japan’s Nikkei 225 fell 1.1%. Chinese markets were closed for a public holiday.

Write to Alexander Osipovich at alexander.osipovich@wsj.com and Joe Wallace at joe.wallace@wsj.com

Second Life—yes, the virtual world from the ‘00s—is staging a comeback to challenge tech giants like Meta that are throwing billions into the metaverse. Its creator explains to WSJ how he plans to refresh the platform—no VR headsets required. Photo composite: Eve Hartley

Copyright ©2022 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

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