Stock Market Today: Dow Sinks 981 Points in Wide Market Washout | Kiplinger

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Thursday’s downward momentum spilled liberally into Friday’s trade, with almost the entire market working in concert to deliver a week-closing stinker.

Weighing on sentiment again were yesterday’s comments by Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell that all but guarantee we’ll see a 50-basis-point Fed funds rate hike following the central bank’s May meeting.

“When a Fed official suggests a 50-basis-point hike, markets immediately start trying to price in 75-basis-point hikes,” says Jamie Cox, managing partner for Harris Financial Group. “It’s madness really. Most investors would be well served to ignore the machinations of the pricing craziness and wait to see what actually happens with rates.”

“The Fed is prepared to inflict real economic pain on the economy to achieve its inflation goals,” adds Dean Smith, chief strategist at investment technology platform FolioBeyond.

John Butters, senior earnings analyst at FactSet, notes that the S&P 500 Index is reporting single-digit earnings growth for the first time since the fourth quarter of 2020, thanks in part to tough year-over-year comparisons, but also macro headwinds.

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“[The Fed’s] hawkish stance is giving investors pause as many are left to evaluate the impact on profit margins and equity multiples moving forward,” says Brian Price, head of investment management for Commonwealth Financial Network. “We’re still very early into earnings season, but higher costs are already denting profit margins and there doesn’t appear to be any material relief in sight.”

Friday’s financial-results calendar did little to improve the market’s earnings situation.

Gap (GPS, -18.0%) crumbled after reporting a 2-cent-per-share quarterly adjusted loss compared to a 67-cent profit the year prior; it also hacked at its current-quarter sales estimates and announced that Old Navy CEO Nancy Green would be stepping down. Verizon (VZ, -5.6%) beat profit expectations but said full-year earnings would come in at the bottom of its predicted range, which sits below analysts’ views.

The major indexes all bled plenty. The Dow Jones Industrial Average (-2.8% to 33,811) saw all of its 30 components finish in the red. The same went for 489 of the stocks in the S&P 500 (-2.8% to 4,271). The broader Nasdaq Composite finished 2.6% lower to 12,839, including tumbles for all but four of the Nasdaq-100’s components. (The Nasdaq-100 is made up of the 100 largest non-financial components of the Nasdaq Composite.)

“[The CBOE Volatility Index, or VIX] seems to express widespread fear that the U.S. economy might teeter into a recession,” says Michael Oyster, chief investment officer for asset-management firm Options Solutions. “Options investors are confronting the reality that the Fed may have to raise rates even more aggressively than what was expected six months ago.”

YCharts

Other news in the stock market today:

The small-cap Russell 2000 was hardly immune from Friday’s woes, dropping 2.6% to 1,940.U.S. crude oil futures fell 1.7% to settle at $102.07 per barrel.Gold futures retreated 0.7% to finish at $1,934.30 an ounce.Bitcoin swung back below $40k, retreating 4.1% to $39,499.01. (Bitcoin trades 24 hours a day; prices reported here are as of 4 p.m.HCA Healthcare (HCA) stock plummeted 21.8% after the Tennessee-based hospital operator lowered its full-year guidance due to higher labor costs. For 2022, HCA now expects earnings per share of $16.40 to $17.60 – down from its previous forecast for earnings of $18.40 per share to $19.20 per share – and revenue of $59.5 billion to $61.5 billion, $500 million lower than its prior guidance. The negative earnings reaction dragged on a number of healthcare stocks, including Universal Health Services (UHS, -14.0%), Tenet Healthcare (THC, -15.7%) and Community Health Systems (CYH, -17.9%).Kimberly-Clark (KMB) was a rare splash of green in today’s market, with the consumer staples stock jumping 8.1% after earnings. In its first quarter, KMB reported adjusted earnings of $1.35 per share on $5.1 billion in revenue – more than analysts were expecting. The maker of Cottonelle toilet paper also raised its full-year revenue and organic sales growth forecasts. Still, CFRA Research analyst Arun Sundaram maintained a Sell rating on the stock. KMB is “unfavorably positioned versus some of its more diversified peers in navigating through this historic inflationary cycle,” the analyst wrote in a note.Investing Green on Earth DayApril 22 marks the 53rd birthday of Earth Day, which was created to highlight the need for environmental protections. And now, perhaps more than ever, Wall Street is getting involved in these efforts through the promotion of investments boasting strong environmental, social and governance (ESG) policies. 

Indeed, even this year’s Earth Day theme – “Invest in Our Planet” – reflects the growing corporate and investing community’s involvement in maintaining our green-and-blue space marble.

“While from the top down, governments have been grappling with the commitments needed for climate change solutions, from the bottom up, the private sector’s innovation and investment have been accelerating needed advances,” says Jason Hoody, head of investment manager research and sustainable investing research for LPL Financial. “Sustainable investing has the possibility of leaving a double legacy: There is the legacy of potential returns that every investor seeks, but there is also a legacy of stewardship by meeting current needs without overburdening the environment or future generations.”

That double legacy is, of course, the goal: Investors want to do right, but they also want to do well. Which is why ESG investors must thread a tight needle in targeting opportunities that are both good stewards of the world and community around them, as well as attractive investment targets.

To mark 2022’s Earth Day, we’ve looked at five ESG picks that we think fit the bill – each underlying company has made great strides in several environmental areas, and each stock boasts high-quality fundamentals.


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