By Donna Kardos Yesalavich
Worry about corporate profit growth and a weekend meeting of
global finance officials put pressure on the Dow Jones Industrial
Average on Friday, but the major indexes still managed their third
straight week of gains.
The blue-chip measure closed down 14.01 points, or 0.13%, to
11132.56.
The Standard & Poor's 500-stock index (SPX) edged up 2.82,
or 0.24%, to 1183.08. The Nasdaq Composite (RIXF) rose 19.72
points, 0.8%, to 2,479.39.
The Dow (DJI) and the S&P 500 closed up for the
third-consecutive week, with both gaining 0.6%. The Nasdaq added
0.4% this week.
Traders hesitated Friday as a meeting of finance ministers and
central bankers from the Group of 20 big industrial and emerging
economies got under way in Gyeongju, South Korea. The market is
watching whether officials, in preparation for a G-20 summit in
Seoul next month, can agree on managing exchange rates to cool
what's been called a "currency war."
"We need some sense of direction over what's going to happen in
currencies," said Michael Farr, president of the
portfolio-management firm Farr, Miller & Washington.
The U.S. Dollar Index (DXY) , tracking the U.S. currency against
a basket of six others, edged up less than 0.1%.
In the meantime, traders focused on the latest earnings reports.
Nearly three-quarters of the S&P 500 companies that have
reported third-quarter results so far this earnings season have
topped analysts' estimates, but traders remain concerned about
currencies and the weak economic backdrop.
"The profit news is constructive, but not enough to lead to a
new leg higher," said Nick Kalivas, vice president of MF
Global.
The Dow's decline Friday was led by American Express Co. (AXP)
and Verizon Communications (VZ) . Both reported
better-than-expected profits, but AmEx fell 3.1% on concerns that
it is seeing weak demand for new loans, and Verizon dropped 1.3% on
disappointment over slowing wireless subscriber growth. Read more
on American Express.
Technology stocks were boosted by encouraging earnings. Riverbed
Technology (RVBD) , which makes products that reduce the load on
networks, surged 18% after its third-quarter revenue beat
expectations and its board approved a 2-for-1 stock split.
Compuware (CPWR) , CA Inc. (CA) and Amazon.com (AMZN) also
reported earnings that beat Wall Street estimates. Compuware jumped
12%, while CA added 5.1%, and Amazon climbed 2.5%.
The energy sector got a boost from Schlumberger Ltd. (SLB)
shares, which climbed 5.4% after the oilfield-services company's
third-quarter earnings more than doubled, topping analysts'
expectations.
But utilities were weighed down by a drop in Exelon Corp. (EXC)
, which fell 3.5%. The owner of nuclear power plants posted a 12%
increase in third-quarter profit, but investors were disappointed
to see operating margin narrowed as costs rose.
Chipotle Mexican Grill (CMG) jumped 15%. The restaurant chain's
third-quarter profit rose 40% as same-store sales and traffic
improved. The company also boosted its same-store sales target for
the year.
Wilmington Trust (WL) shares added 8.6%. Trading in the bank was
halted two times Friday afternoon when its jump set off a
single-stock circuit breaker twice on reports Wilmington is in
talks with Canadian banks.
Treasurys declined, pushing the 10-year note yield's (UST10Y) up
to 2.56%. Crude-oil futures crept higher, while gold futures also
advanced.