Alibaba, JD.com up; Applied Materials, Amcor down - Midday stock movers

  • Home
  • Information
  • Aug 16, 2024

The stock market is trading higher midday after a week of encouraging economic indicators, with inflation cooling and retail sales and jobless figures coming in better than expected.

Consumer sentiment in August increased to 67.8, up from 66.4 in July and surpassing the 66.6 forecast, according to the University of Michigan’s survey. The university also reported flat inflation data for the current month.

The S&P 500, Nasdaq Composite, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average are all up around 0.2%. The Russell 2000 Index rose 0.3%.

Related: CPI inflation report upsets betting on big Federal Reserve rate cut

Trending stocks: Nvidia has popped for the fifth consecutive day, up 1.3%, and traded around $124 midday at last check. Tesla, Apple, and Alphabet are up at last check. Meta lost 1.6%. Ulta Beauty's stock continued to rally after Berkshire Hathaway took a stake. Chinese e-commerce giants JD.com and Alibaba both surged after earnings.

Alibaba, JD.com up; Applied Materials, Amcor down - Midday stock movers
Despite the slowdown in Chinese consumer demand, Alibaba posted strong growth in its cloud service.

Shutterstock

S&P 500 big stock movers today

Five S&P 500 stocks making big midday moves at last check are:

The worst-performing five S&P 500 stocks with the largest midday drop at last check are:

Stocks also worth noting with significant moves include:

JD.com and Alibaba surge on earnings results

Chinese e-commerce giant JD.com jumped 7% midday after reporting a second-quarter earnings beat.

The company earned 9.36 Chinese yuan ($7.17) per share for the quarter, a 73.7% increase that surpassed the estimated 6.07 yuan. Revenue came in at 291.4 billion yuan, just shy of the expected 291.47 billion yuan. JD.com credits the earnings growth to low prices, growth in logistics services, and investment success.

JD.com’s bigger rival Alibaba also surged 5%. The Chinese fintech and e-commerce group reported its June quarter revenue of 243.24 billion yuan ($34.01 billion) on Thursday, compared with the 249.05 billion yuan expected.

Related: Analysts reboot Alibaba stock price target after earnings

Despite the slowdown in Chinese consumer demand, Alibaba posted strong growth in its cloud service, up 6% year over year, which was the fastest growth rate since Q2 2022.

Applied Materials fell despite earnings beat

Applied Materials stock lost 1.7% despite upbeat fiscal third-quarter earnings.

The semiconductor equipment company earned $2.12 per share, surpassing the $2.03 per share estimated. Its revenue reached $6.78 billion for the quarter, also topping the forecast of $6.68 billion.

The company sees a “strong pull related to AI and data center computing” and expects its revenue for the current quarter to be $6.93 billion, up 3% year over year at the midpoint.

“The race for AI leadership will, in large part, be determined by which companies in the semiconductor industry are first to deliver substantial improvements in energy-efficient compute performance,” said CEO Gary Dickerson in the earnings call. “The value of bringing next-generation semiconductor technology to market faster has never been greater.”

Amcor tumbles following revenue miss

Amcor stock lost 5% after the company revealed mixed financial results.

For the fiscal fourth quarter ending June 30, the packaging company reported adjusted earnings per share of 21 cents, exceeding the estimated 2 cents. But revenue of $3.54 billion missed the analyst projections of $3.63 billion.

More Retail Stocks:

The company now expects adjusted earnings to fall between 72 cents and 76 cents per share in FY 2025, slightly below the consensus estimate of 75 cents.

The company also warned of weak demand ahead. “Consumer demand continues to be muted. We would consider that to be low-single-digit down still. And also when we go into ’25 with our expectations, we wouldn’t assume that that necessarily improves,” said CEO Peter Konieczny in an earnings call.

Related: Veteran fund manager sees world of pain coming for stocks