The Dow Moved Higher Despite These 6 Stocks

Updated

Although investors received the good news that the national unemployment rate had dropped to 7.7% today, many believe the dip was due to the holidays, and workers temporarily stopping their job search. Additionally, the markets were hit with disappointing preliminary consumer confidence numbers for December, but all the mixed economic data today couldn't keep the Dow Jones Industrial Average down. The index managed to close the day up 81 points, or 0.62%, and now sits at 13,155.

Today, only six of the Dow's 30 components ended the trading session in the red. This afternoon, I explained why Verizon , Cisco , and Microsoft all moved lower. Read about what caused those three companies to fall into the red by clicking here, or stick around to learn why Alcoa , Pfizer , and Intel dipped.

So why did they fall?
Alcoa signed a multi-year power contract with the Bonneville Power Administration. The contract runs through September 2022 and will guarantee Alcoa power at a certain price for its Intalco Works aluminum smelter in Ferndale, Washington. While the deal helps Alcoa in cost-controlling measures, it also indicates that the company will remain operating a plant which was built in 1966. Shares of Alcoa closed the day down 0.82% today.


Shares of Pfizer lost 0.2% of their value today, after a report yesterday announced that the U.K.'s health cost regulator declined to approve Pfizer's Inlyta drug, which is used to treat advanced kidney cancer. The $100 per tablet price tag was considered too high, and Pfizer's offer to offer the drug at a discount was not enough to get the drug past regulators.

Lastly, shares of Intel closed down just 0.02% today. The company has struggled over the past few weeks as reports have emerged that PC demand continues to slide. Investors seem unsure of the future of the chip maker since it missed the mobile revolution, and other PC chip manufactures have already begun to move toward investor's short sale lists. Advanced Micro Devices , for example. has seen its share price cut in half over the past few months, and recently had more than 27% of its shares sold short.

As PC sales continue to shrink, Intel's margins will also take a hit, even if it becomes the sole supplier to the PC market. Intel needs to find a way to start gaining market share in the mobile industry quickly, or it may slowly fade away like AMD. Get to know what opportunities Intel has moving forward, and whether the stock is a buy today, in this premium research report on Intel, in which our analyst runs through all of the key topics that investors should understand about the chip giant. Better yet, you'll continue to receive updates for an entire year. Click here now to learn more.

The article The Dow Moved Higher Despite These 6 Stocks originally appeared on Fool.com.

Fool contributor Matt Thalman owns shares of Microsoft. The Motley Fool owns shares of Intel and Microsoft. Motley Fool newsletter services recommend Intel and Microsoft. Try any of our Foolish newsletter services free for 30 days. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

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