Stock market today: Dow, S&P 500, and Nasdaq slide as oil rises amid Hormuz standoff
US stocks pulled back on Thursday with progress toward US-Iran peace talks stalled, as investors assessed Tesla’s (TSLA) results amid a fresh rush of earnings.
The S&P 500 (^GSPC) slid 0.2%, coming off another record-setting session for the broad benchmark. Meanwhile, the Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) and tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) dropped 0.4% and 0.3%, respectively.
Stocks fell as oil rose for a fourth day after Iran and the US failed to meet for further peace talks, despite President Trump’s indefinite extension of the current truce. The key Strait of Hormuz remains blocked as the two sides vie for control, pushing Brent crude futures (BZ=F) back above $102 per barrel. Meanwhile, West Texas Intermediate crude (CL=F) topped $93.
Investors are looking to earnings reports to provide uplift as war-stoked inflation worries sour the mood. Tesla stock initially climbed after its earnings beat but turned lower at the opening bell on Thursday, slipping almost 3% after CEO Elon Musk signaled a massive capital expenditure push that will drag on cash flow.
Elsewhere, ServiceNow (NOW) stock sank over 15% after the opening bell despite an upbeat earnings report, while IBM (IBM) shed 11% as slowing revenue growth fed worries that Anthropic’s AI tools will disrupt its business.
The broader software sector (IGV) traded down by roughly 5% after investors reacted negatively to the results from ServiceNow and IBM.
American Express (AXP) lost 1.5% despite earnings released Thursday morning that showed a beat on both revenue and profit. Shares in Blackstone (BX) also lost more than 4% after the financial services giant beat on both revenue and earnings estimates.
American Airlines (AAL) rose 3% after the airline beat revenue and earnings estimates despite lowering its outlook on a $4 billion increase in fuel costs due to the soaring price of jet fuel.
Economic data updates include a preliminary S&P Global reading on April manufacturing activity, which could reflect the impact of the Iran war. Initial jobless claims data showed the weekly employment figured ticked up slightly to 214,000.
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