Previous close | 3.2600 |
Open | 3.2400 |
Bid | 0.0000 x 4000 |
Ask | 0.0000 x 2200 |
Day's range | 3.2000 - 3.3500 |
52-week range | 1.8150 - 4.4900 |
Volume | |
Avg. volume | 4,903,646 |
Market cap | 1.602B |
Beta (5Y monthly) | 2.89 |
PE ratio (TTM) | N/A |
EPS (TTM) | -0.6900 |
Earnings date | 08 May 2024 |
Forward dividend & yield | N/A (N/A) |
Ex-dividend date | N/A |
1y target est | 4.04 |
The Nasdaq and the S&P 500 ended lower on Friday as Netflix shares weighed, but American Express kept the Dow afloat after quarterly earnings from both companies, while growing pessimism that the Federal Reserve would cut interest rates soon also dented sentiment. Netflix slumped as one of the bigger drags on the benchmark S&P index and Nasdaq after the video streaming company's second-quarter revenue view fell short of analysts' expectations while the company also unexpectedly said it would no longer provide subscriber counts.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average was on track to rise on Friday on the Nasdaq Composite’s worst day since late 2022. It says more about what stocks are and aren’t in the Dow than it does about anything else. The Dow was up 134 points, or 0.4%, in recent trading.
U.S. stocks were mixed on Friday and Treasury yields dipped as investors juggled lackluster earnings, uncertainties surrounding central bank policy and geopolitical strife. Gold and crude prices advanced as market participants kept an uneasy eye on unfolding turmoil in the Middle East. The Dow was the lone gainer among the three major U.S. equity indexes, while the Nasdaq, weighed down by megacap tech and tech-related momentum stocks, tumbled 2.3%.