Alphabet, Apple, Microsoft, Meta, and Amazon all “magnificently” beat analyst expectations in their latest quarterly updates. But the market didn’t show them a lot of spectacular love in return. Investor scrutiny has grown increasingly intense over the amount of money the tech giants are spending on AI, with not enough sales or profit to show for it so far. The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite fell 2.8% on Thursday, and the S&P 500 slumped 1.9% – in what was their worst day in almost two months.
The US economy had a some-good, some-bad kind of week. It grew at an annualized 2.8% in the third quarter, just a smidgen slower than expected, helped by the dependable, resilient American consumer. But the US job market added a paltry 12,000 new jobs in October to the economy, far fewer than the 113,000 forecast – a worse-than-expected result blamed mostly on a pair of devastating hurricanes and an ongoing strike at Boeing. The unemployment rate held steady though, at 4.1%, hinting that there’s still considerable strength in the labor market.
The UK government’s latest budget sparked a selloff in UK bonds and set investors on edge. The plan includes £70 billion ($91 billion) in spending on education, housing, infrastructure, and healthcare – and further spending on major big-ticket items like transport and construction. And, since much of the spending would be financed by increased borrowing, that sent government bond (or gilt) prices sharply lower and pushed the yield on the 10-year note to its highest level all year. (Bond yields fall as their prices rise).
Stay classy ✌️
Your Finimize Analyst team