Market Wavering, On Track For Worst Week Since 2008: WarnerMedia Parent AT&T Scraps $4B Stock Repurchase On Coronavirus Fears

Movies

Stocks rose Friday morning, dipped, then rose again as the market continued a rocky ride, exhibitors struggled to hold on to gains and WarnerMedia parent AT&T scrapped a major stock repurchase plan to conserve cash.

Investors are weighing a massive stimulus package being finalized by Congress against the rapid spread of the coronavirus infection, corporate distress and surging unemployment in the U.S. Market players are really hoping indexes will be able to lock in Thursday’s gains, although they may be disappointed. If the S&P 500 did end today’s session higher, it would the first back-to-back gain in more than a month.

In mid-morning trade the Dow Jones Industrial Average was up 0.38%, or 75 points.

The moves follows a modest recovery Thursday in choppy trading driving by tech and energy stocks after weeks of stomach churning declines.

Exhibitors in particular had rallied and the upward trajectory continued sort of on Friday The industry has asked for a cash injection from Congress that will help it survive a period where theaters across the country are shuttered. Today, they were holding steady, led by Cinemark, up about 5%. AMC Entertainment, the nation’s biggest chain, Imax and National Cinemedia were bobbing between positive and negative territory, making it hard to tell where they would shake out.

AT&T said Friday it was canceling a planned $4 billion accelerated share repurchase in the second quarter. “While our business continues to operate effectively during the Covid-19 global pandemic,” the company said in an SEC filing,, “we have decided at this time to cancel this agreement and any other repurchases to maintain flexibility and focus on continued investment in serving our customers, taking care of our employees and enhancing our network, including nationwide 5G.”

Struggling Live Nation, which got a boost yesterday when investor Liberty Media paid a loan so it wouldn’t breach covenants, was down up 1%. Elsewhere, Disney was off 1.4%; Comcast off 1.5%; ViacomCBS about flat; Netflix up 3.7%.

But prices were changing by the second.

Products You May Like

Articles You May Like

Meet Porsche’s Dynamic Duo Where Performance Meets Sophistication
Home sales surged in October before mortgage rates jumped
Three Mile Island nuclear turning point as Big Tech influence grows
Vegan hospitality training in Cambodia and Vietnam
Ellen DeGeneres and Portia de Rossi “Get the Hell Out” of the US Because of Trump