S&P 500 slips as Apple slump offsets Amazon surge; July job gains miss estimates

This post was originally published on this site

The S&P 500 fell 0.5%, the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 0.4%, or 143 points, Nasdaq was down 0.2%.

This economy created 187,000 new jobs in July, missing economists’ estimates of 200,000, but a tick higher in average hourly earnings and an unexpected fall in unemployment suggested that the labor market remains tight and the Federal Reserve likely has more work to do to slow economic growth and inflation.

Apple Inc (NASDAQ:AAPL) fell more than 4% as its better-than-expected quarterly results were overshadowed by worries that weaker iPhone demand likely continued into the current quarter.

While Apple’s management is focused on becoming more operationally efficient by cutting costs, the “gravity of a challenging smartphone market particularly in developed regions that should continue the rest of 2023 is a headwind for the stock,” UBS said in a note.

Amazon.com Inc (NASDAQ:AMZN), however, took all the plaudits on the earnings stage rising 9% after reporting better-than-expected second quarter results, the highlight of which was better-than-expected performance in its cloud business Amazon Web Services.

“The highlight of the quarter was arguably AWS revenue growth that came in about 2% points better than Street expectations, and most importantly management commentary that pointed towards a rationalization bottom with growth trends that have proved stable through July,” Deutsche Bank said in a note.

Tupperware Brands Corporation (NYSE:TUP) rose more than 40% after agreeing to a debt restructuring deal that will help free up about $150 million of cash interest and fees as the container maker continues efforts to turn around its business.

Tupperware Brands is up over 560% over the past month following the latest rally, with the bulk of gains coming in July, when the stock attracted the attention of meme-stock traders.

Legendary investor Carl Icahn’s conglomerate Icahn Enterprises (NASDAQ:IEP) fell 24% after halving its dividend on Friday, just months after short-seller Hindenburg Research alleged the company deploys a “ponzi-like” structure to pay dividend.