Wall Street slips off record highs, Tesla drops after fatal crash

US stocks closed lower on Monday, slipping from last week's record levels, as investors awaited guidance from first-quarter earnings to justify high valuations, while Tesla shares fell after a fatal car crash. Picture: Reuters/Carlo Allegri

US stocks closed lower on Monday, slipping from last week's record levels, as investors awaited guidance from first-quarter earnings to justify high valuations, while Tesla shares fell after a fatal car crash. Picture: Reuters/Carlo Allegri

Published Apr 20, 2021

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By Herbert Lash

INTERNATIONAL - US stocks closed lower on Monday, slipping from last week's record levels, as investors awaited guidance from first-quarter earnings to justify high valuations, while Tesla shares fell after a fatal car crash.

The electric-car maker slid 3.4 percent after a Tesla vehicle believed to be operating without anyone in the driver's seat crashed into a tree on Saturday north of Houston, killing two occupants.

The stock was the biggest drag on the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite Index. An 8.4 percent drop over the weekend in bitcoin, in which Tesla has an investment, also weighed on its share price.

The S&P 500 was mostly lower, with Microsoft, Amazon.com and Nvidia also weighing on the benchmark index as analysts await results this week and next that form the bulk of earnings season.

Corporate outlooks should indicate to what degree the rally from last year's lows can continue. Analysts expect first-quarter earnings to have grown 30.9 percent from a year ago,according to Refinitiv IBES data.

The US economy is poised to boom as consumers hold $2 trillion in savings in excess of pre-pandemic levels, said Doug Peta, chief US investment strategist at BCA Research, adding markets are in pause mode.

"If indeed we do keep grinding higher that would be healthy,that would suggest that the grinding higher is sustainable,"Peta said. "The pull backs along the way are healthy."

Real estate was the only one of the 11 S&P 500 sectors to post gains.

Nvidia fell 3.5 percent after the UK government said it would look into the national security implications of Nvidia's purchase of British chip designer ARM Holdings, raising a question mark over the $40 billion deal.

Coca-Cola rose 0.6 percent after the beverage maker trounced estimates for quarterly profit and revenue, benefiting from the easing of pandemic curbs and wide vaccine rollouts.

International Business Machines, another blue-chip company, slipped 0.4 percent ahead of its results due after the market close.

"The market has had a huge jump to the upside so it needs tot ake a little bit of rest," said Peter Cardillo, chief market economist at Spartan Capital Securities in New York.

"For now it's just a little bit of profit taking as traders await results from big tech names on Wall Street."

The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 123.04 points, or 0.36 percent, to 34,077.63. The S&P 500 lost 22.21 points, or 0.53 percent, at 4,163.26; while the Nasdaq Composite dropped 137.58 points, or 0.98 percent, to 13,914.77.

Volume on US exchanges was 9.86 billion shares.

A recent retreat in benchmark 10-year Treasury yields from 14-month highs has helped high-flying technology stocks to rebound, while strong economic data has lifted the S&P 500 and the Dow to record levels.

The S&P 500 has gained the past four weeks, its longest winning streak since August 2020.

GameStop jumped 6.3 percent on the announcement of its chief executive's resignation.

Crypto stocks including miners Riot Blockchain and Marathon Digital each fell more than 8 percent as bitcoin took a hammering over the weekend. Bitcoin closed down 0.7 percent.

Harley-Davidson jumped 9.7 percent after the motorcycle maker raised it full-year forecast for sales growth.

REUTERS

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