DJIA Probes Key Level As Key Earnings Disappoint

 | Oct 23, 2019 15:23

Out of the major US indices, the Dow Jones Industrial Average has struggled the most in recent times. Unlike the S&P 500, the Dow is not weighted by market capitalisation. This makes it vulnerable as any of its 30 components can have a big impact on the index, which is why – despite its popularity – it is not considered to be a good representation of the US stock market.

Undoubtedly, the struggles at Boeing (NYSE:BA) have been one of the main reasons explaining the Dow’s poor performance of late. But we have also had disappointing earnings and/or outlook guidance from some of its other components such as Caterpillar (NYSE:CAT), Texas Instruments (NASDAQ:TXN) and McDonald’s (NYSE:MCD):

  • Caterpillar (NYSE:CAT) shares fell about 3% pre-market today after the world’s biggest construction and mining equipment maker reported a 13.5% fall in quarterly profit due to weak demand in its construction and resources units. As is becoming a trend, the company also cut its 2019 profit forecast to $10.90-$11.40 compared with its previous estimate of $12.06-$13.06 per share.
  • Texas Instruments (NASDAQ:TXN) saw its shares sink 10% after the markets closed last night. The bellwether semiconductor firm reported Q3 revenue that came in below expectations and offered lacklustre Q4 earnings guidance.
  • McDonalds saw its shares fall about 5% yesterday after it reported weaker than expected earnings (Q3 EPS $2.11 vs. $2.21) and said sales rose less than expected (+4.8% vs. +5.2%).
  • Recently, Boeing (NYSE:BA) has been struggling because of its troubled 737 Max which has been grounded since March after two fatal crashes in just over five months. But today, the stock looked set to open about 1.8% higher judging by pre-market action, erasing earlier losses, despite the company posting poor earnings. It reported an EPS $1.45 of vs. $2.09 expected while revenue of $19.98 billion was also below expectations of $19.67 billion. Don’t be surprised if the stock falls back when the cash markets open later on.

h2 Lots of earnings still to come/h2

It is going to be a very busy period for earnings, with 62% of the S&P 500 companies reporting their results this and next week. So, we could have a much better understanding of valuations by next Friday. The stock markets may well have moved sharply by then. Judging by the above earnings, it doesn’t look like this earnings season is going to be pretty. Indeed, tech giants face shrinking growth, according to my stock market expert colleague Ken Odeluga is why. So, there is a good chance we could see a correction in the markets despite Trump’s ongoing “making good progress” jawboning in relation to US-China trade talks.

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Meanwhile today’s after-the-bell earnings highlights include Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA), Ford (NYSE:F), Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT), PayPal (NASDAQ:PYPL) and eBay (NASDAQ:EBAY).

h3 DJIA clinging onto key support but pressure is growing (DJIA Proxy) /h3