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Wall Street Drifts; Intel Tumbles; Gold01/23 15:26
The U.S. stock market drifted through mixed trading Friday, as a zigzag week
punctuated by loud threats and pullbacks finished with a quiet and tentative
close.
NEW YORK (AP) -- The U.S. stock market drifted through mixed trading Friday,
as a zigzag week punctuated by loud threats and pullbacks finished with a quiet
and tentative close.
The S&P 500 was basically flat and edged up by less than 0.1% but still
notched a second straight week with a modest loss. The Dow Jones Industrial
Average dipped 285 points, or 0.6%, and the Nasdaq composite rose 0.3%.
The majority of stocks on Wall Street fell, and Intel weighed on the market
after tumbling 17%. The chip company reported better results for the end of
2025 than analysts expected. But investors focused instead on its forecast for
the first three months of this year, which fell short of Wall Street's
expectations.
Chief Financial Officer David Zinsner said shortages of supplies are
affecting the entire industry, and Intel expects available supply to hit a
bottom early this year before improving in the spring and beyond. CEO Lip-Bu
Tan highlighted the company's opportunities created by the
artificial-intelligence era.
Moves in the U.S. bond market were relatively modest following sharp swings
early in the week, but other markets still showed potential signs of
nervousness.
The U.S. dollar's value fell against the Japanese yen, Swiss franc and other
currencies. It had slid sharply early in the week after President Donald Trump
threatened 10% tariffs on European countries for opposing his push to own
Greenland.
That drop, paired with declines for prices for U.S. Treasury bonds, had
suggested global investors may be backing out of U.S. markets. But some relief
came on Wednesday after Trump announced "the framework of a future deal with
respect to Greenland" and called off the tariffs, though few details are
available about it.
Gold's price, meanwhile, rose to another record Friday and neared $5,000 per
ounce in a signal that investors are still looking for something safer to own.
It's already up nearly 15% for the year so far.
On Wall Street, Capital One Financial sank 7.6% after reporting a weaker
profit for the end of 2025 than analysts expected. It also said it was buying
Brex, which helps businesses issue corporate credit cards, for $5.15 billion in
cash and stock.
On the winning side of the market was CSX, which climbed 2.4% even though
the railroad reported a weaker profit than analysts expected. Some analysts
highlighted the company's forecast for how much more operating profit it
expects to retain from each $1 of revenue during 2026.
Clorox gained 1.1% after saying it was buying the maker of Purell, GOJO
Industries, for $2.25 billion in cash.
All told, the S&P 500 rose 2.26 points to 6,915.61. The Dow Jones Industrial
Average fell 285.30 to 49,098.71, and the Nasdaq composite rose 65.22 to
23,501.24.
In the bond market, Treasury yields inched lower as prices for U.S.
government bonds rose.
A survey of U.S. consumers said expectations for inflation in the upcoming
year improved to 4%. That's the lowest such reading in a year, according to the
University of Michigan's survey, even it remains well above the 2% inflation
that the Federal Reserve targets.
That kind of improvement could help avoid a worst-case scenario the Fed has
been desperate to avoid, one where expectations for high inflation trigger a
vicious cycle of behavior that only worsens inflation.
Overall sentiment among U.S. consumers was also a touch stronger than
economists expected. That could help keep them spending and the main engine of
the U.S. economy humming. A separate preliminary report from S&P Global
suggested growth is continuing for U.S. business activity.
The yield of the 10-year Treasury fell to 4.23% from 4.26% late Thursday.
The Fed's next chance to move the short-term interest rate it controls will
come on Wednesday, but the widespread expectation is that it will hold steady.
In stock markets abroad, indexes were mixed in Europe after rising across
much of Asia.
Japan's Nikkei 225 added 0.3% after the Bank of Japan kept its key interest
rate unchanged, as many investors expected. The central bank has been slowly
pulling its policy rate higher from below zero and had raised it to 0.75% in
December.
Global markets have calmed after struggling with a quick surge for long-term
government bond yields in Japan early in the week. The move higher came on
worries that Japan's Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi might make moves that would
add heavily to the government's already big debt.
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