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US open: Healthcare stocks drag Dow into the red, Nasdaq registers intraday record high

By Iain Gilbert

Date: Wednesday 17 Apr 2019

US open: Healthcare stocks drag Dow into the red, Nasdaq registers intraday record high

(Sharecast News) - US stocks opened mostly lower on Wednesday as investors thumbed over earnings releases from the likes of Morgan Stanley, BNY Mellon and PepsiCo and looked to data that indicated stabilisation of China\'s economic growth.
At 1530 BST, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 0.13% at 26,419.24 and the S&P 500 was trading 0.10% lower at 2,904.25. The Nasdaq meanwhile was up 0.03% at 8,002.25, after registering an intraday high of 7,715.07 at the bell.

However, stocks soon took a turn as losses over at healthcare outfits Anthem, Cigna and UnitedHealth weighed on Wall Street following a report from analysts at JPMorgan highlighting \"temporary downside risks\" to the sector in the form of US Senator Bernie Sanders\' most recent medicare proposal.

The Dow opened 33 points lower on Wednesday as PepsiCo shares fizzed 3.07% higher after the food and beverage company\'s quarterly earnings and revenue beat analysts\' expectations.

Shares in banking giant Morgan Stanley were up 1.89% in early trade after it posted first-quarter earnings per share of $1.39, down from $1.45 a year ago but ahead of expectations of around $1.17, while Bank of New York Mellon slumped 8.55% after releasing its earnings, with profit down 20% from Q1 2018 to $910m.

Netflix slipped 0.78% despite its Q1 numbers beating on the top and bottom lines as disappointing guidance weighed on sentiment.

Neil Wilson, chief market analysts at Markets.com, said: \"Two main reasons to be cautious - price hikes are being rolled out across a number of key geographies and this gives management enough reason to be conservative about net new subscriber adds.

\"Meanwhile, we should also look at an increasingly competitive space with Disney and Apple recently announcing their own streaming platforms. Further, we should anticipate certain plateaus in the growth cycle.\"

Elsewhere, IBM was in the red by 3.59% in early trade after the technology company\'s first-quarter revenues fell short of expectations.

Away from earnings, Sino-US trade relations were in focus again as White House economic adviser Larry Kudlow said \"very good progress\" was being made in talks.

\"We like what we see, but I\'m not here to make a forecast,\" he told Fox Business Network when asked about whether he could definitively say a deal would be reached between the two.

Investors in the US were also digesting the latest batch of data out of China overnight, which showed that first-quarter GDP grew at a 6.4% pace, beating estimates for 6.3% and matching the 6.4% seen in the fourth quarter of last year.

Meanwhile, the Lunar New Year slowdown in industrial production in February of 5.3% saw a rebound to an expansion of 8.5% year-on-year, ahead of expectations of 5.9%. In addition, retail sales for March rose 8.7%, up from 8.2%.

On the US macroeconomic calendar, according to the Department of Commerce, the US trade deficit on goods and services shrank in March at a pace of 3.4% month-on-month to reach $49.4bn (consensus: -$53.6bn), amid a pickup in sales of civilian aircraft.

Elsewhere, US wholesale inventories grew less than anticipated in February as sales rose for a second consecutive month.

Commerce revealed that wholesale inventories had climbed 0.2% month-on-month to an all-time high $668.9bn.

Data for January was revised down to show wholesale inventories had advanced just 1.2% instead of the 1.4% originally reported. Wholesale inventories were up 6.9% on a year-on-year.

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