Stocks extend gains on Tuesday with the Dow now up more than 500 points

FAN Editor

A trader works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City, July 13, 2022.

Brendan McDermid | Reuters

The Dow Jones Industrial Average rebounded Tuesday as Wall Street bet on better-than-expected corporate earnings reports.

The Dow jumped 530 points, or 1.71%. The S&P 500 ticked up 2.02%, and the Nasdaq Composite rose 2.31%.

Investors assessed the latest round of earnings reports that showed businesses working through economic pressures better than feared in the second quarter, even as inflationary pressures and recession fears persist. 

“Both investors and the companies were expecting hot inflation, so companies talking about hot inflation having happened in that second quarter was not a surprise at all,” Kim Forrest, founder and chief investment officer at Bokeh Capital Partners. “What was a surprise was that they were able to manage through it well.”

Hasbro shares climbed 2% after the toymaker’s earnings per share beat a Refinitiv forecast, though its revenue for the previous quarter came in a tad below expectations.

Shares of Netflix are 2% higher ahead of its earnings report that is scheduled Tuesday after the close. Later in the week, Tesla, United Airlines, American Airlines, Snap, Twitter and Verizon are among those scheduled to report.

Meanwhile, Johnson & Johnson shares ticked lower after the pharmaceutical giant cut its full-year revenue and profit guidance, although the company reported better-than-expected quarterly earnings and revenue

IBM shares fell more than 6%, after the tech company lowered its forecast for cash flow, even while reporting earnings that beat Wall Street’s earnings and revenue estimates.

All sectors in the S&P 500 were higher Tuesday. Bank stocks outperformed with shares of Goldman Sachs rising more than 3% following a strong earnings report Monday. Bank of America climbed nearly 3%, and Wells Fargo gained 2%.

Google was up more than 2% following a 20-for-1 stock split that took place Monday.

Market participants are at the front end of what’s expected to be a volatile earnings season. So far, roughly 9% of S&P 500 companies have reported calendar second-quarter earnings. Of those companies, about two-thirds have beaten analyst expectations, FactSet data shows.

Wall Street is betting that stocks have mostly priced in a downturn after their sharp declines this year, though some continued to advise investors to hold on to cash and prepare for more losses ahead.

“Trading is likely to remain very choppy, with more bear market rallies, in the months ahead,” Wolfe Research’s Chris Senyek wrote in a Tuesday note.

On Monday, the Dow shed more than 200 points to end the day in the red, reversing a morning rally fueled by solid earnings reports from Goldman Sachs and Bank of America. Oil broke above $100 a barrel, and bitcoin surged to the highest levels seen since mid-June.

Late in Monday’s session, stocks were dragged down on a Bloomberg report that Apple would slow hiring and spending on growth next year to prepare for a potential economic downturn. Shares of the iPhone maker ended the day about 2.1% lower.

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