Alexandra Canal
Stock market today: S&P 500, Nasdaq snap 8-day winning streak as focus turns to Jackson Hole
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Markets took a breather on Tuesday to snap their longest rally this year, with all three major indexes closing in the red as the focus shifts to Fed Chair Powell's speech at Jackson Hole later this week.
The S&P 500 (^GSPC) dropped about 0.2%, coming off an eight-strong run of daily wins for the benchmark index — its longest since November. The Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) also shed around 0.2%, or less than 100 points, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) fell roughly 0.3%.
Stocks are marking time as anticipation builds for Powell's speech at the Jackson Hole get-together for central bankers on Friday.
Investors will also be closely watching expected annual revisions from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) on Wednesday, which could knock up to a million jobs off previously reported job growth over the last year.
Stocks have made a strong comeback from an early August rout as fresh economic data bolstered the case for the central bank to start lowering rates sooner — and maybe further — than previously thought.
Wall Street expects Powell to set the stage for a September rate cut in dovish remarks on Friday, now that several Fed officials have given their blessing to easing. The debate now is whether a 0.5% cut is in the cards, rather than on the timing of the move, and what part upcoming labor data will play in deciding that.
On the corporate front, Lowe's (LOW) stock fell after the company cut its annual profit and sales forecasts in its quarterly earnings. The home improvement retailer joined rival Home Depot (HD) in flagging muted consumer demand for big-ticket purchases.
In commodities, gold (GC=F) resumed its rally, climbing above $2,520 an ounce to hit another record high. The metal's price has risen over 20% so far this year as geopolitical conflicts and rate-cut prospects burnish the appeal of the safe-haven and non-interest-bearing asset.
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Netflix stock soars past record high — here's why
Netflix stock just hit an all-time high.
On Tuesday, shares of the streaming giant soared past their 2021 record intraday high of $701 to trade around $710.
The moves come as investors applaud the company's foray into live sports while its ad-supported tier continues to gain traction, with the company revealing in a blog post that it secured "a 150% plus increase in upfront ad sales commitments over 2023."
Upcoming movies and series like "Happy Gilmore 2" and "Squid Game 2," along with the recent acquisition of live sports content like the NFL Christmas Day games and WWE Raw, which will kick off in January 2024, have fueled the success of those ad partnerships, Netflix said.
"Our advertising clients remain excited about our highly engaged audience and the variety and quality of our programming," said Amy Reinhard, president of advertising at Netflix.
Reinhard cited ad partners that include LVMH, Amazon, Hilton, L’Oreal, and Google, among others. The company will launch its in-house ad tech platform globally in 2025.
But it's not just advertising that's fueling the recent rally.
Analysts have also said the company is well-positioned to hike prices. Netflix last raised the price of its Standard plan in January 2022, upping the monthly cost to $15.49 from $13.99. It also raised the price of its Premium tier by $2 to $19.99 a month at the time; the company again raised the cost of that plan in October to $22.99.
The company has yet to raise the price of its ad-supported offering, introduced under two years ago, which remains one of the cheapest ad plans among all of the major streaming players at $6.99 a month.
Netflix has previously said its goal is to make ads "a more substantial revenue stream that contributes to sustained, healthy revenue growth in 2025 and beyond." It will phase out its lowest-priced ad-free streaming plan as a result, making the $15.49 Standard plan its lowest-priced offering for ad-free experiences.
Netflix's record-high price action on Tuesday follows a mid-July sell-off that hit shares after the company reported revenue guidance that missed Wall Street's expectations for the current quarter. Shares had also been under pressure from a more recent sell-off in Big Tech that's since recovered.