S&P 500, Dow Close Lower, But Media Stocks Support Bullish Bets By Investing.com

© Reuters

By Yasin Ebrahim

Investing.com – The S&P 500 and Dow closed lower after hitting intraday records Thursday, as a Micron-induced drag on tech and weakness in energy weighed on stocks.

The closed down 0.3% after earlier hitting a record of 4,808.52 intraday, while the fell 0.3%, or 90.5 points, after hitting an all-time high of 36,679.44. The Nasdaq closed down 0.2%.

Micron Technology (NASDAQ:) fell more than 2%, forcing chip stocks and broader tech to end the day in the red, after the chipmaker warned that Covid-related shutdowns in Xi’an, China, would hurt output.

Big tech also weighed on the broader market as Microsoft (NASDAQ:), Apple (NASDAQ:), and Alphabet (NASDAQ:) ended the day lower, while Facebook (NASDAQ:) and Amazon (NASDAQ:) were higher. 

Communication services kept downside in check, however, underpinned by a gains in ViacomCBS (NASDAQ:), Discovery (NASDAQ:) and other video streaming stocks following expectations that U.S. video content spending is set to ramp up in 2022.

The top eight U.S. media groups including Netflix (NASDAQ:) plan to spend at least $100 billion on new movies and television shows, the Financial Times reported.

Twitter (NYSE:), meanwhile, led the sector higher, up more more than 3% as the social media remained on track to snap four straight monthly losses.

Tech, meanwhile, was weighed down by a stumble in chip stocks, paced by a decline in Micron.

In health care, Johnson & Johnson’s booster shot was found to be 85% effective in preventing hospitalizations in a South African study. Johnson & Johnson (NYSE:) was up about 0.4%.

The positive news comes a health experts warned of disruptions in coming weeks as the omicron Covid-19 variant continues to rip through the U.S. The U.S. set a one-day record on Wednesday as new daily case total topped 488,000.

Biogen (NASDAQ:) gave up its gains from a day earlier, down more than 7% after Samsung (KS:) denied reports that it was in talks to buy the health care company for $42 billion.  

Cruise line companies including Carnival (NYSE:), and Royal Caribbean Cruises (NYSE:) were on the back foot after after the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Thursday said travelers should avoid going on cruises even if they’re vaccinated

On the economic front, meanwhile, the number of people filing for unemployment insurance in the week ended Dec. 25, fell to 198,000 from 206,000. That beat expectations for a fall to 206,000, with claims remaining at a 52-year low.

Jefferies, however, warned that the jobless claims, which tend to deteriorate this time of the year, still  isn’t showing any impact from the Omicron surge.

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