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Dow closes 800 points higher on Friday, registers fourth straight week of gains

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Pro Picks: Watch all of Friday's big stock calls on CNBC

Stocks rose on Friday despite a tumble in Amazon shares after economic data pointed to slowing inflation and a steady consumer.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed 828.52 points, or about 2.6%, higher at 32,861.80. The S&P 500 added nearly 2.5%, to close at 3,901.06. The Nasdaq Composite ended up about 2.9%, to close at 11,102.45.

On a weekly basis, the major indexes made notable gains. It was the fourth positive week in a row for the Dow, a first since a five-week streak ending in November 2021. The 30-stock index is up 5.7% this week in its best performance since May. It's also on track for its best month since January 1976.

The S&P 500 and the Nasdaq are up 3.9% and 2.2%, respectively, for the week.

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The stock market has fractured this week as investors dumped technology shares following weak results and outlooks from Microsoft, Alphabet and Meta and rotated into economically sensitive stocks that will benefit if the U.S. economy can skirt a recession.

At the same time, investors have found hope in data that came out over the course of the week indicating inflation may be easing, increasing optimism that the Federal Reserve could break from its trend of 75 basis point rate hikes after the November meeting.

"Inflation data really wasn't that bad. The earnings have been not great, but not awful," said Megan Horneman, chief investment officer at Verdence. "When you have that middle of the road, that helps equity markets."

Amazon plunged by 6.8% after the company posted weaker-than-expected quarterly revenue and issued disappointing fourth-quarter sales guidance Thursday. Apple shares ended Friday up 7.5%. The tech giant reported weaker-than-anticipated iPhone revenue on Thursday, but beat Wall Street estimates for quarterly earnings and revenue.

Apple and other more positive performers, like Intel, have given investors footholds within what some see as a particularly tumultuous tech sector, subsequently providing upward pressure to the tech-heavy Nasdaq, said Jay Hatfield, CEO of Infrastructure Capital Management. He said the market was also boosted by oil giants Chevron and Exxon Mobil, up about 1.2% and 2.9%, respectively, after both reported beating expectations before the bell.

"Apple's really the lone star, if you will, of the mega-cap tech stocks," Hatfield said. "It's just a unique market where bad is terrible, but OK is good, so, on a relative basis, it's spectacular."

The market got a boost after the core personal consumption expenditures price index in September increased 0.5% from the previous month and 5.1% from a year ago, still high but mostly in-line with expectations. This is the preferred gauge of inflation for the Federal Reserve. Personal spending rose 0.6%, more than expected, the data showed.

Lea la cobertura del mercado de hoy en español aquí.

More than two-thirds of Friday's 52-week highs in the S&P 500 were all-time records

Twenty of the 29 stocks (69%) in the S&P 500 that touched 52-week highs on Friday also touched all-time highs.

Three of the 29 are also in the Dow Jones Industrial Average — Merck, McDonald's and Amgen — and only Amgen failed to reach an all-time high.

  • Raymond James Financial (RJF), rose to the highest ever, going back to its 1983 IPO
  • W.R. Berkley (WRB), all-time high since going public in the early 1970s
  • Biogen (BIIB), highest since Oct. 2021
  • Elevance Health (ELV), all-time high dating back to 2001 IPO
  • Huntington Ingalls (HII), highest since Feb. 2020
  • T-Mobile US (TMUS), all-time going back to MetroPCS IPO in 2007
  • General Parts Co. (GPC), all-time high back to 1948 IPO
  • McDonald's (MCD), all-time high back to 1965 IPO
  • O'Reilly Auto (ORLY), all-time high back to 1993 IPO
  • Campbell Soup (CPB), highest since Jan. 2021
  • General Mills (GIS), all-time high going back to 1927
  • Hershey (HSY), all-time high back through 1972 history
  • Pepsico (PEP), all-time high back to Pepsi merger with Frito-Lay in 1965 to form Pepsico
  • J.M. Smucker Company (SJM), highest since Aug. 2016
  • Chevron (CVX), all-time high back to 2000 merger with Texaco
  • Exxon (XOM), all-time high back to 1920 NYSE listing
  • Principal Financial (PFG), all-time high back to 2001 IPO
  • Everest RE Group (RE), all-time high back to 1995 IPO
  • Amgen (AMGN), highest since Jan. 2021
  • Cardinal Health (CAH), highest since Aug. 2017
  • Cigna (CI), all-time high back to 1972 IPO
  • Gilead Sciences (GILD), highest since July 2020
  • Humana (HUM), all-time high back to IPO as Extendicare in 1968 (renamed Humana in 1974)
  • Eli Lilly (LLY), all-time high back to 1952 when company first offered shares publicly 
  • McKesson (MCK), all-time high back through 1983
  • Lockheed Martin (LMT), all-time high back to merger of Martin Marietta and Lockheed in 1995
  • Northrop Grumman (NOC), all-time high back to merger of Northrop Aircraft and Grumman Aerospace in 1994
  • Rollins Inc (ROL), highest since Jan. 2021
  • Constellation Energy (CEG), all-time high back to spin-off from Exelon in Jan. 2022

— Scott Schnipper, Christopher Hayes

Indexes close up

The Dow ended up 828.52 points, or about 2.6%, at 32,861.80. That marks its fourth straight week of gains. It's also on track for its best month since January 1976.

The S&P 500 increased roughly 2.5% to close at 3,901.06. It's the first time the index closed above 3,900 since September.

After initially opening lower due to poor tech earnings, the Nasdaq changed course and climbed nearly 2.9% to end at 11,102.45.

— Alex Harring

Coffee futures slumped this week, taking down an ETN that tracks your morning cup

December coffee futures fell 5.1% Friday to 169.8 cents a pound after touching 167.75 cents, the lowest since July 2021. Traders figured Brazil's crop outlook is improving and a softer global economy might weaken demand.

For the week, coffee closed down 11.05%, the steepest weekly decline since Sept. 2020.

As a result, the Barclays iPath Bloomberg Coffee exchange traded note (JO) dropped 11% this week and 24% over the past month.

— Scott Schnipper, Gina Francolla

Caterpillar logs best week in over a decade

Wall Street may be worried about a looming recession, but one of the stocks most leveraged to the economy is on a hot streak.

Caterpillar finished the week up 15.3%, its best week since 2009.

That is due in part to a strong third-quarter report, where the machinery company beat Wall Street estimates for adjusted earnings and revenue. Caterpillar also gave upbeat guidance about the fourth quarter.

—Jesse Pound

Simplify launches two more income-focused ETFs

Income-focused ETFs have become increasingly popular as stocks have fallen and interest rates have climbed, and the space continues to expand.

On Friday, Simplify launched a Stable Income ETF (BUCK) and Enhanced Income ETF (HIGH). Both funds plan to sell option spreads on broad indexes in order to generate income and invest in short duration debt.

The new funds have an expense ratio of 0.36% and 0.51%, respectively.

Simplify is a smaller player in the ETF space, but its Interest Rate Hedge ETF (PFIX) has been one of the best products on the market in 2022. The fund has seen its price roughly double this year.

— Jesse Pound

S&P 500 nears 3,900

The S&P 500 has broken 3,900 points, and continues to fluctuate around that threshold, as markets near close.

If the index closes above 3,900 points, it would be the first time that level was hit since Sept. 15, when it closed at 3901.35.

— Alex Harring

CNN Fear & Greed Index hits its highest point since August

Maybe the market's changing its mind?

CNN Business' Fear & Greed Index, a measure of seven different market indicators, stands at its highest since the height of the August recovery that off the June lows.

On Friday, the index hit 61, the most since reaching 64 on August 19. The index gives each indicator equal weighting, with the cumulative reading calculating a score from 0 (maximum fear) to 100 (maximum greed). The seven components track market momentum, stock price strength, stock price breadth, put and call options, junk bond demand, market volatility and demand for safe havens.

Nationwide's chief of investment research Mark Hackett notes that "the tone of the market is shifting, with investor sentiment and momentum showing significant improvement, and the market higher in three of the past four weeks. While the fundamental picture remains challenged, technical rebounds almost always predate a fundamental turnaround, as investors realize that too much negativity is priced into markets."

August 1982, anyone? That's when stocks began to turn far in advance of improved economic numbers in 1983.

— Scott Schnipper, Jeff Cox

Meta downgraded by Edward Jones due to concerns over metaverse investment

Following disappointing earnings, Edward Jones downgraded Meta to a hold from a buy.

The firm said the tech giant's plans for increasing spending on the metaverse was larger than originally anticipated. That elevated concerns over how long a return on investment will take.

To be sure, Edward Jones did report some potential tailwinds. It believes the company can see ad revenue, which is a hot topic this earnings season given its connection to total revenue, can return to growth by late 2023.

Earnings per share came in lower than expected, though the company did beat on revenue, according to its earnings report this week. Share values plummeted more than 20% on the news. They are down 70% so far this year.

— Alex Harring

Dow up more than 800 points entering final trading hour

The Dow was up 804 points, or 2.5%, heading into the final hour of trading.

The Nasdaq and S&P 500 also continued to rally, adding 2.7% and 2.4%, respectively.

— Alex Harring

Tech ETFs see big inflows despite earnings season struggles

A rough earnings stretch for Big Tech may have caused some big moves for stocks, but it hasn't scared off investors from the space as a whole.

According to FactSet, the four biggest tech and consumer discretionary ETFs have seen positive inflows over the past week. Even the Ark Innovation ETF, seen as one of the riskier ways to bet on tech, has attracted significant money.

— Jesse Pound

Dow on track for best month in nearly half a century

The Dow is up slightly over 14% this month. If that performance holds, it would be the best month for the index in nearly half a century.

The Dow has added 14.06% compared to the start of the month, according to FactSet. The last time it saw a better month was in January 1976, when it had a gain of 14.41%.

Compared to prior Octobers, it is on track to be the best montly gain in any October since the index's inception in 1896.

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— Alex Harring

McDonald's earnings underscore why investors should hold the stock during difficult times, Morgan Stanley says

McDonald's strong third-quarter results further prove why investors should hold the stock during difficult macroecnomic periods, Morgan Stanley said.

"MCD is often owned as a classic defensive stock, with pushback that valuation and crowding limit upside, but 2Q and 3Q results are hard to ignore, and offer a proof point that the brand is also a way to play offense," wrote analyst John Glass in a note to clients Thursday.

In its third-quarter report released Thursday, McDonald's beat top and bottom lines estimates and said customers continue to flock to restaurants despite rising menu prices.

While McDonald's does face some inflation-drive margin pressures and foreign exchange headwinds, Glass said company offers "best in class" top line growth stemming from previous investments in marketing, digital and innovation.

"Rather than suffering from current consumer challenges, MCD appears to be leaning in, with a combination of relevant value, adept marketing and growing digital prowess," he said.

McDonald's shares are up roughly 2% this year and rose more than 3% on Friday. Morgan Stanley's $285 price target suggests a 7.5% upside for the stock from Thursday's close.

— Samantha Subin

Halfway through earnings season, 3Q profits are up about 4% despite high-profile misses

We're halfway through earnings season, according to Refinitiv.

Here's where were stand: There have been more misses so far this season, with 22% of companies that have reported falling short of earnings estimates and 33% shy on revenue, according to Refinitiv.

That's definitely higher than trends over the past year. The average for the four previous quarters is 18% missed on earnings and 26% missed on revenue, according to the data provider.

But despite the disappointing performances, the current earnings growth rate still hovers around 4% for the third quarter. That's right around where it was before the season started. It's currently at 4.1% vs. 4.5% on Oct. 1, it said.

Within that average, though, are some steeper drop-offs. The growth rate for the financial sector has sunk about 7 percentage points since the start of earnings season. The same goes for industrials and materials. Communication services has fallen about 5 percentage points. And this may surprise you: Tech is only down 2 percentage points.

While the third-quarter growth rate has been stable, fourth-quarter estimates have dropped much more.

Profits are expected to rise 2.6% in the current quarter, compared with an estimate of 5.8% growth when the month began.

—Robert Hum

`Tech wreck' notwithstanding, the $36 billion SPDR Tech ETF is on pace for a 2nd straight weekly gain

You wouldn't know there was a "tech wreck" by looking at the $36-billion market cap Technology Select Sector SPDR Fund this week.

The fund, with 78 stocks, tracks the S&P 500 Information Technology Index and climbed as much as 2.44% in early trading Friday, on pace for its first up day in three, and its second straight positive week.

Leaders Friday include Verisign, Intel, AMD and Apple, all of which posted early gains of 4% or more.

So, what about the "tech wreck"?

The XLK doesn't include either Amazon or Meta Platforms, which both posted disappointing earnings. That helps.

— Scott Schnipper, Gina Francolla, Jesse Pound

Technology names among stocks making the biggest moves midday

Technology names and companies that reported earnings results were among the names making the biggest moves midday:

Check out the full list of stocks making the biggest moves midday here.

— Carmen Reinicke, Samantha Subin

Costco poised for big year, according to Morgan Stanley

2023 could be a "special year" for club retailer Costco, according to Morgan Stanley.

Analyst Simeon Gutman said in a note to clients that the company could see a price hike and a special dividend next year.

"While we don't think either are imminent, it would surprise us if both don't happen at some point in calendar '23," Gutman wrote.

And beyond next year, the company could see sustained growth from its international push.

"International expansion is a key part of the investment case because: 1) COST is underpenetrated in many countries; 2) the concept is one of the few in Retail that resonates across geographies; and 3) the value proposition is even more pronounced than in the US because competition in the Club channel is lower," Gutman wrote in a note to clients.

Morgan Stanley reiterated its overweight rating on the stock. Shares of Costco were up 1.55% in morning trading.

— Jesse Pound

Indexes up 2% as second half of trading begins

All three indexes were trading up around 2% entering the second half of trading.

The Dow added 711 points, or 2.2%.

The S&P 500 was up 76 points, or 2%.

Despite being weighed down earlier in the day by disappointing big-tech earnings, the Nasdaq gained 240 points, or 2.2%, as investors looked to other tech stocks performing better in earnings season.

— Alex Harring

Friday kicks of a period of historically strong trading for S&P 500

Friday marked the start of a five-trading-day period that has historically been the best of the year for the S&P 500.

Stocks gained 1.62% on average for the five trading days starting Oct. 28 since 1950, according to Ryan Detrick, chief market strategist at Carson Group. That is the best out of all periods of five trading days in the year when averaging performance.

The five trading days starting the next day, Oct. 29, mark the second highest period at 1.52%.

— Alex Harring

Dow Industrials in October are on pace to record their best month since President Reagan

It's been a tough 2022 for almost every kind of investor, but maybe it's really morning in America again.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average is higher by 13.4% so far in October — on pace for its single best monthly performance since January 1987, when it climbed 13.8%.

In January 1987, there were still two more years to run in President Reagan's second term. And only about nine months to go before the fateful October 19, 1987 stock market crash that drove down the Dow by a record 22.6% in a single day.

— Scott Schnipper, Peter Schacknow

The S&P 500's highs and lows

The following companies in the S&P 500 are trading at notable lows:

  • Amazon trading at lows not seen since Apr, 2020
  • DaVita trading at lows not seen since Apr, 2020
  • Edwards Lifesciences trading at lows not seen since July, 2020
  • Catalent trading at lows not seen since May, 2020
  • Bio-Rad Laboratories trading at lows not seen since Apr, 2020
  • VF Corp. trading at lows not seen since Sept, 2011
  • Essex Property Trust trading at lows not seen since Nov, 2020
  • Assurant trading at lows not seen since Mar, 2021

 Meanwhile, the following are hitting highs:

  • T-Mobile trading at all-time highs back to the MetroPCS IPO in Apr, 2007
  • General Parts Company trading at all-time high levels back to its IPO in 1948
  • McDonald's trading at all-time highs back to its IPO in 1965
  • O'Reilly Auto trading at all-time high levels back to its IPO in April 1993
  • Campbell Soup Company trading at levels not seen since January 2021
  • General Mills trading at all-time highs back through its history to 1927
  • Hershey trading at all-time high levels back through our history to 1972
  • Pepsico trading at all-time highs back to Pepsi-Cola's merger with Frito-Lay in 1965 to form Pepsico
  • J.M. Smucker Company trading at levels not seen since Aug, 2016
  • Chevron trading at all-time highs back to its merger with Texaco in 2000
  • Exxon trading at all-time highs back to when it was listed on the NYSE in 1920
  • Principal Financial trading at all-time high levels back to its IPO in 2001
  • Everest RE Group trading at all-time highs back to its IPO in October 1995
  • Amgen trading at levels not seen since January 2021
  • Cardinal Health trading at levels not seen since August 2017
  • Cigna trading at all-time high levels back to its IPO in 1972
  • Gilead Sciences trading at levels not seen since July 2020
  • Humana trading at all-time high levels back to its IPO as Extendicare in 1968; the company was renamed Humana in 1974
  • Eli Lilly trading at all-time high levels back to 1952 when the company offered its first public shares of stock. 
  • McKesson trading all-time highs back through our history to 1983
  • Lockheed Martin trading at all-time high levels back to their merger of Martin Marietta and Lockheed in 1995
  • Northrop Grumman trading at all-time highs back to the merger between Northrop Aircraft and Grumman Aerospace in 1994
  • Rollins trading at levels not seen since January 2021
  • Constellation Energy trading at all-time high levels back to its spin-off from Exelon in January 2022

— Chris Hayes, Alex Harring

Dow continues ascent, breaks 600 points

The Dow has continued its upward march, exceeding the 600-point threshold as it trades nearly 2% up.

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— Alex Harring

Wells Fargo says the penalty for missing earnings is the worst in nearly a decade

The penalty for missing earnings estimates this season is the worst in about a decade, according to Wells Fargo.

Companies reporting disappointing results averaged a loss of 456 basis points, while those reporting an earnings beat averaged a gain of 91 basis points, according to analyst Christopher Harvey. Taken together, large cap companies have averaged a loss of 49 basis points this earnings season, with roughly two-thirds of the S&P 500 having reported so far.

"While large-cap firms are not in dire shape, post-earnings reactions suggest some of our early season concerns are being realized," Harvey wrote in a Friday note. "The 'bottom line' is that investors have been significantly less tolerant of EPS misses, with the average penalty for missing -456bps — the worst we have seen in nearly a decade."

The "particularly high" number of earnings misses this season points to further lower revisions of earnings per share estimates, according to Wells Fargo. The firm recommends investors tilt toward high-momentum stocks going forward, saying they are attractively priced and prove more resilient in an inflationary environment.

— Sarah Min

Consumer sentiment, inflation expectations on the rise, University of Michigan survey shows

Consumer sentiment edged up in October, but so did the outlook for inflation, according to a closely watched measure.

The final reading on the University of Michigan Survey of Consumers released Friday showed a reading of 59.9, up 1.3 percentage points from the month before and about in line with the Dow Jones estimate of 59.8.

At the same time, the outlook for inflation in the year ahead rose to 5%, up from 4.7% in September. The five-year outlook also was higher, climbing to 2.9%.

Federal Reserve officials watch the survey for clues about inflation expectations, which they consider key in their goal of maintaining price stability around a 2% inflation rate. The central bank is widely expected to increase benchmark interest rates by 0.75 percentage point at its meeting next week.

—Jeff Cox

Pending home sales fall 10%

Pending home sales fell sharply in September as higher mortgage rates continue to hurt the real estate sector.

Pending home sales were down 10% in September, compared to a 4% drop expected by economists, according to Dow Jones.

Excluding the pandemic-impacted April 2020 reading, the pending home sales index is now at its lowest level since June 2010.

—Jesse Pound, Diana Olick

Stocks open up as first hour of trading begins

The major indexes rose in the first hour of trading.

The Dow was up 420 points, or 1.3%.

The S&P 500 added 0.8%. The Nasdaq, despite being hurt by tech earnings Thursday, was up 0.7%.

— Alex Harring

Six trillion dollar market cap companies have seen major losses, according to Bespoke

In a rough year for technology mega cap stocks, six big names that had trillion-dollar valuations have lost billions in the bear market, according to data from Bespoke.

Here's how much six big names have lost from their peak market caps through Thursday:

  • Apple has shed 21.7% and lost $695 billion
  • Microsoft is down 34.8% from its peak and lost $909.3 billion
  • Alphabet has lost 38.9%, shedding $807.4 billion
  • Amazon is down 50.3% from its high, and has lost $940.8 billion
  • Tesla has shed 46.1%, losing $537.1 billion
  • Meta is down nearly 75% from its all-time high and has lost $820.2 billion

—Carmen Reinicke

Dow futures turn positive following release of new data

Futures for the Dow turned green following the release of data from the Bureau of Economic Analysis that showed inflation was in line with expectations while data gauging the health of the consumer was better.

Dow futures added 46 points, or 0.1%, as of 8:45 a.m.

The benchmark was down 30 points, or 0.1%, at 8:29 a.m. – one minute before the release of the data.

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— Alex Harring

Consumer spending beats expectations, no surprises for inflation data

There were no negative surprises for the market in group of key data releases at 8:30 a.m., which showed consumer balance sheets holding up better than expected while inflation readings were in line with estimates.

Personal income up 0.4%, while consumer spending rose 0.6%, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis. Economists surveyed by Dow Jones were expecting gains of 0.3% and 0.4%, respectively.

On the inflation front, the employment cost index rose 1.2% in the third quarter, in line with expectations, according to Dow Jones.

Core PCE was up 0.5% month over month, and 5.1% year over year. Economists expected readings of 0.5% and 5.2%, respectively.

— Jesse Pound

Stocks making the biggest pre-market moves: Pinterest, Intel, Deckers and more

Though Friday is typically a lighter day for corporate earnings, some were still moving the market:

  • Pinterest – Pinterest surged 9.6% earnings, revenue and number of monthly users all beat expectations.
  • Intel – Intel popped 6.9%. Though the chipmaker cut its full-year sales forecast, it beat expectations for the quarter and said it will focus on cost reductions going forward
  • Deckers Outdoor – The footwear and apparel maker dipped 6% after it reaffirmed its full-year outlook while beating profit expectations.

See the full list here.

— Alex Harring, Peter Schacknow

Where the major indexes stand going into final trading day of week

As of Thursday's close, the Dow is up 3.1% this week. That puts it on track for a fourth straight positive week, which would be a first for 2022.

The Dow had a 5-week streak in early November 2021.

Despite ending down Thursday, the S&P 500 is up 1.5% this week – on pace for its second straight positive week. That would be its first two-week weekly gain since August.

The Nasdaq has shed 0.6% so far this week. If the index stays in the red after the bell Friday, it would be the second negative week out of the last three.

The tech-heavy index has been weighed down by disappointing tech results this week.

— Alex Harring

Caterpillar downgraded by Deutsche Bank despite strong quarter

Industrial stock Caterpillar was downgraded by Deutsche Bank as the bank says it is nearing its top.

"There is simply not enough upside potential left vs. the current stock price to maintain a Buy rating," analyst Nicole DeBlase wrote. "We also feel that in many ways, recommending CAT after the recent move in the stock is playing with fire."

The stock closed Thursday up 7.7% after it beat expectations when reporting earnings. It is up 2.6% so far this year, outperforming the Dow, which is down 9.7%.

CNBC Pro subscribers can read the full story here.

— Samantha Subin, Alex Harring

Exxon beats

Exxon Mobil shares followed Chevron's stock higher in premarket trading after earnings topped estimates. Exxon reported adjusted third-quarter EPS of $4.45, higher than the $3.79 per share expected by analysts, according to Refinitiv. Revenue was slightly lighter than expected. Exxon also said it bought back $4.5 billion in stock last quarter.

-John Melloy

Chevron shares higher after earnings beat

Chevron shares were higher by about 2% in premarket trading after the oil giant reported better-than-expected earnings and revenue as net income climbed 84% for the third quarter. It earned an adjusted $5.56 in the period, topping the $4.81 estimate from analysts according to Refinitiv. Revenue came in at $66.64 billion vs. the $58.22 billion estimate collected by revenue. Chevron shares are already up more than 51% this year as oil prices soared.

-John Melloy

European markets: Here are the opening calls

The FTSE 100 is expected to be down 32 points to 7,039 and Germany's DAX 67 points lower at 13,155, according to data from IG. The CAC will be down 25 points to open at 6,226 and Italy's MIB will be 89 points lower at 22,347.

— Hannah Ward-Glenton

CNBC Pro: There's a lot of pain ahead for markets, strategist warns

Investors should think twice before chasing the recent bounce in stocks, according to one strategist.

"I think the market rally is a breathing space rally," Beat Wittmann, chairman of Switzerland's Porta Advisors, told CNBC.

CNBC Pro subscribers can read more here.

— Jenni Reid

CNBC Pro: Tech stocks are tumbling but one fund manager still loves Microsoft. Here’s why

Tech stocks have tumbled this week, as investor optimism fades following disappointing results from some of the sector's biggest names.  

But fund manager Brian Arcese is standing by Microsoft, calling it a "solid long term defensive holding."

Pro subscribers can read more here.

— Zavier Ong

Apple shares reverse higher

Apple shares reversed slightly higher after initially falling as much as about 4% after hours. The drop came after the company reported quarterly financial results. Investors were initially spooked by weaker-than-expected iPhone revenue. Still, Apple beat analysts' estimates for earnings and revenue in the third quarter.

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— Tanaya Macheel

Amazon slides after posting weak earnings

Shares of Amazon tumbled in extended trading Thursday after the e-commerce giant reported weaker-than-expected earnings and revenue for the third quarter and gave a disappointing fourth-quarter sales forecast.

The stock plummeted as much as 16% in extended trading, which would mark its biggest decline since 2006 should the drop hold up on Friday.

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This is the second time this year that disappointing financial results from Amazon sparked a double-digit percentage selloff. In April, a weak forecast for the second quarter led to a 14% drop in the stock.

— Annie Palmer, Tanaya Macheel

Stock futures open lower on Friday following tech rout in regular trading

Stock futures were lower on Thursday evening after weak Amazon earnings added to the disappointment in tech earnings this week.

Futures tied to the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 0.1%. S&P 500 futures lost 0.6%, and Nasdaq 100 futures dropped 0.9%.

— Tanaya Macheel