The S&P 500 slipped slightly from a record high on Tuesday as Wall Street geared up for the heart of corporate earnings season including reports from a slew of blue-chip companies and major tech players.
The Dow Jones Industrials dropped 22.96 points to 30.937.04
The S&P 500 settled 5.74 points to 3,849.62
The NASDAQ handed over 9.93 points Tuesday to 13,626.07.
General Electric shares jumped 2.7% on its better-than-expected industrial free cash flow for the fourth quarter and a rosy outlook for the year. Johnson & Johnson popped more than 2% after the drugmaker’s earnings topped expectations. 3M also jumped 3.3% after strong results.
Tech giant Microsoft will announce its fiscal second-quarter earnings after the bell. Shares of Microsoft climbed more than 1%. Apple, Facebook, Caterpillar and Tesla are all set to report later this week.
Wild swings resumed in heavily shorted stocks, including GameStop and AMC Entertainment, as enthusiastic retail investors active in chat rooms continued to bet against short-selling hedge funds. The volatility has some investors concerned about stocks becoming detached from fundamentals as speculation runs rampant.
GameStop popped another 92.7% at a record on Tuesday. AMC gained more than 12%.
Companies started the earnings season with a high beat rate. Of the S&P 500 components that have already reported earnings, over 70% have topped Wall Street’s expectations on both sales and earnings, according to data from Bank of America.
On the COVID-19 front, health officials and policymakers continued to caution the public about new strains of the virus. Moderna said Monday that its vaccine does provide some protection against a variant found in South Africa, while officials in Minnesota reported the first U.S. confirmed case of a strain found in Brazil.
Investors are also waiting for a new policy statement from the Federal Reserve as the central bank begins its two-day meeting on Tuesday.
Former Fed Chair Janet Yellen was confirmed as Treasury secretary, becoming the first woman to hold the position.
Prices for 10-Year Treasurys were unchanged, keeping yields at Monday’s 1.04%.
Oil prices lost 27 cents to $52.50 U.S. a barrel.
Gold prices faded $5.50 to $1,849.70 U.S. an ounce.