US LNG exports surge but will buyers in China turn up?
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* Boeing falls on record annual loss, to delay 777X jet
* Microsoft rises after upbeat quarterly results
* GameStop rally quashes hedge funds, sparks short squeeze
(Updates to market close)
By Chuck Mikolajczak
NEW YORK, Jan 27 (Reuters) - U.S. stocks suffered their
biggest one-day percentage drop in three months on Wednesday,
adding to losses after the latest Fed statement as major indexes
were also pressured by a slump in Boeing and a selling of long
positions by hedge funds.
Shares of videogame retailer GameStop Corp GME.N and movie
theater operator AMC Entertainment Holdings Inc AMC.N each
more than doubled on Wednesday, continuing a torrid run higher
over the past week, as amateur investors again piled into the
stocks, forcing short-sellers such as Citron and Melvin to
abandon their losing bets. "It's a dangerous game to play from both sides of the
spectrum, whether you're long or short," said Matthew Keator,
managing partner in the Keator Group, a wealth management firm
in Lenox, Massachusetts. "You get close enough to the fire
you're going to get burned."
After briefly paring losses, declines accelerated in the
wake of the policy statement from the Federal Reserve. The
central bank kept overnight interest rate near zero and made no
change to its monthly bond purchases, as was widely expected,
and pledged to keep that support intact until a full economic
rebound is in place. "Given the continued concerns around COVID and
disappointingly slow rollout of the vaccine, the US economy is
likely to lose momentum in the first quarter of the year," said
Seema Shah, chief strategist at Principal Global Investors in
London.
"Yet with fiscal stimulus having taken over from monetary
policy as the only game in town, it was always doubtful the Fed
would announce any new actions this month."
Unofficially, the Dow Jones Industrial Average .DJI fell
668.06 points, or 2.16%, to 30,268.98, the S&P 500 .SPX lost
102.01 points, or 2.65%, to 3,747.61 and the Nasdaq Composite
.IXIC dropped 362.99 points, or 2.66%, to 13,263.08.
Each of the three major U.S. indexes saw their biggest daily
percentage decline since Oct. 28. The declines also pushed the
benchmark S&P index into negative territory for the year.
Boeing Co BA.N fell and was among the top drags on the Dow
after the planemaker took a hefty $6.5 billion charge on its
all-new 777X jetliner due to the COVID-19 pandemic and the
aftermath of a two-year safety crisis over its 737 MAX.
In a week packed with quarterly earnings from mega-cap
companies, Microsoft Corp MSFT.O initially rose after its
results as the software maker continues to benefit from remote
working and learning trends globally but erased those gains as
part of the broader market slump. Microsoft's results did set a positive tone, however, for
other technology-related companies including Apple Inc AAPL.O
and Facebook Inc FB.O , which are set to report quarterly
numbers after the closing bell.
These heavyweight majors have recently come back into favor
after blowout results from streaming giant Netflix Inc NFLX.O ,
and as investors dumped economy-linked banks, energy and
small-cap stocks.
But concerns about heightened stock market valuations,
rising coronavirus cases and uneven distribution of vaccine
rollouts have heightened investor worry about a pullback and
increase in volatility in the near-term.
The CBOE Market Volatility index .VIX , often used as a
gauge for investor anxiety, rose as high as 34.38, the its
highest level since Nov 4.
Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc WBA.O was a bright spot on
the day, as shares rose after the drugstore chain named the
outgoing chief operating officer of Starbucks, Roz Brewer, as
its CEO.