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Tuesday, July 19, 2022

19-07-22, Dow Jones Industrial Average

 Apple Inc. is the latest Big Tech company to tighten its belt, and its stock is falling.

The iPhone maker AAPL, -2.06%, anticipating an economic downturn, plans to curtail hiring and spending for some teams next year, according to a Bloomberg report, citing people with knowledge of the matter. The report sent Apple shares down 2% in trading Monday.

News of the targeted cost-cutting edict comes a week before the company is scheduled to announce quarterly results. Despite the trimming, Apple still intends a full product launch schedule in 2023 that includes a mixed-reality headset, according to Bloomberg.

Apple had no comment.

An imperfect storm of inflation, the war in Ukraine, supply-chain slowdowns, and a possible recession has sent some of tech’s biggest players scrambling to slash expenses as they prepare to announce quarterly results.

In recent days, the chief executives of Facebook parent company Meta Platforms Inc. META, +1.54% and Alphabet Inc.’s GOOGL, -2.46% GOOG, -2.53% Google have informed staff of impending cost reductions and slowing hiring.

Meanwhile, Microsoft Corp. MSFT, -0.96% has imposed a hiring freeze, Netflix Inc. NFLX, +0.96% has announced two layoff rounds of about 450 people, and Amazon.com Inc. AMZN, +0.18% discussed belt tightening during its first-quarter earnings announcement in April.

Netflix is scheduled to report earnings Tuesday, and the rest are slated for next week.

At the same time, Twitter Inc. TWTR, +1.78%, Coinbase Global Inc. COIN, +9.07%, Tesla Inc. TSLA, +0.20%, Redfin Corp. RDFN, +1.72%, and Peloton Interactive Inc. PTON, +1.77% have also reported layoffs.

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U.S. stocks gave up early gains to finish lower on Monday, after Bloomberg reported that Apple Inc. plans to slow hiring and spending growth in some divisions next year in anticipation of a potential economic downturn.

Dow industrials posted their biggest drop in more than two weeks and, along with the S&P 500, are now down six of the past seven trading days.

How stocks traded
  • The Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA  fell 215.65 points, or 0.7%, to close at 31,072.61, after rising as much as 356 points at its session high. That’s the largest one-day point and percentage drop since June 30, according to Dow Jones Market Data.
  • The S&P 500 SPX dropped 32.31 points, or 0.8%, to finish at 3,830.85.
  • The Nasdaq Composite COMP declined 92.37 points, or 0.8%, to end at 11,360.05.

What drove markets

A Bloomberg report about Apple’s plan to slow hiring and spending growth was the most likely reason that the stock market shifted into a selloff mode on Monday afternoon, according Dan Eye, chief investment officer of Fort Pitt Capital Group in Harrisburg, Pa. Shares of Apple AAPL finished down by 2.1% after the report.

“Investors are really questioning optimistic earnings forecasts for the rest of this year and into 2023,” Eye said via phone. “We are going to need to get our arms around what earnings are going to look like in coming quarters and that’s going to depend on guidance.”

Earlier on Monday, investors had been focused on positive elements within the quarterly results of Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Bank of America Corp.

source:MarketWatch/google

Yesterday's DJIA failed to hit the volatility resistance of 31851 but faced huge selling pressure around  31644

For today strongest volatility Resistance formed at 31817 and volatility Support at 31140...if breaches either side level then only it makes matter.

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