STOCKS TANK, DOW FALLS 200: Here's what you need to know
All three indexes declined by at least 1% in trading, led by the tech-heavy Nasdaq. Additionally, oil stumbled a bit while the bond market also sold off.
We've got the headlines, but first, the scoreboard:
- Dow: 18,126.40, -202.64, (-1.11%)
- S&P 500: 2,136.26, -27.40, (-1.27%)
- Nasdaq: 5,246.99, -80.88, (-1.52%)
- WTI crude oil: $50.77, -0.58, (-1.13%)
- 10-year Treasury yield: 1.759%, +0.023. (+1.30%)
- Alcoa started off earnings season on a rough note. The aluminum producer missed on both revenue - posting only $5.21 billion against analyst estimates of $5.33 billion and earnings per share - coming in at $0.32 per share against projections of $0.34 per share. This also marks the start of earnings season.
- Currencies had a wild day. The British pound continued its slide on Brexit fears. The South African rand weakened after it was announced that the country's finance minister would go on trial for corruption. The Chinese yuan slid to its 6-year low against the dollar after being pegged at its lowest level in years earlier in the week. The Swedish krona sank on bad inflation data.
- Illumina crashed. The biotech firm said that it would miss the revenue guidance and analysts expectations. After the disappointing news, shares of the company tanked by 25% in trading on Tuesday.
- Samsung will no longer produce the Galaxy Note 7. The phone-maker said it would stop production of its large smartphone after an issue that caused the Note 7 to explode could not be resolved. The company had tried to replace the part causing the problems, but they persisted and led to the production halt.
- A leaked Wells Fargo conference call revealed that the recent scandal hasn't hurt it's business. The call among bank executives, a recording of which was obtained by the Wall Street Journal, laid out the impact of the recent scandal and investigation on the companies profits. According to executives, the bank was planning on keeping it quiet that it had not made much difference.
Additionally:
The world economy is stuck in a 'rolling cycle of crises'
Donald Trump said America's inner cities are economic disaster - they're not
Things haven't gone to plan for Saudi Arabia
Goldman does a really bad job of making Caterpillar stock calls