US stocks little changed on mixed earnings

New York: Wall Street stocks finished a volatile session little changed Friday following mixed corporate earnings and a better-than-expected report on first-quarter US economic growth.

Earnings remained at the forefront of the investor agenda as Amazon rocketed higher following strong results while disappointing figures from ExxonMobil weighed on the Dow.

US growth came in at 2.3 percent in the January-March period, according to government data, down from 2.9 percent in the final quarter of 2017 but better than analyst expectations.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average dipped 0.1 percent to end the week at 24,311.19.

The broad-based S&P 500 rose 0.1 percent to finish at 2,669.91, while the tech-rich Nasdaq Composite Index increased a hair to 7,119.80.

US stocks have had a choppy week, alternating between worries about higher interest rates and ambivalence over corporate earnings that have been mostly good but sometimes not quite as strong as hoped for.

Amazon jumped 3.6 percent after reporting its quarterly profit had more than doubled to $1.6 billion due in part to strength in Amazon Web Services, prompting some analysts like Canaccord Genuity tech analyst Michael Graham to lift their targets for Amazon shares.

“Thumping is the best word we can think of to describe AWS in Q1 as revenue growth accelerated for the second straight quarter,” Graham said. “Meanwhile, the ecommerce business continues its strong growth.”

Online travel booking firm Expedia surged 8.2 percent as it reported a 15 percent jump in first-quarter revenues to $2.3 billion.

Dow member ExxonMobil dropped 3.8 percent after earnings-per-share lagged analyst expectations, even as net income jumped 16 percent to $4.7 billion.

Analysts said Exxon Mobil’s oil and gas production disappointed with the company reporting its weakest oil and gas output since 1999 at 3.9 million barrels of oil-equivalent, down 6.3 percent.

US Steel sank 14.2 percent despite reporting a net profit of $18 million, up from a year-ago loss of $180 million. Analysts were perturbed by some operational problems at a plant in Michigan that the company said would impact second-quarter results.

AFP