US Stocks finished mixed on Friday as profit reports trickled in, with Shaw Group sliding after an earnings miss, Yahoo gaining on an analyst upgrade, and Exxon Mobil continuing its recent decline.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 36.65, or 0.45%, to 8146.52. For the week, the index lost 1.62%, declining for the fourth week in a row. The Standard & Poor's 500 lost 3.55, or 0.40%, to 879.13. For the week, the index lost 1.93%, also down four weeks in a row. The Nasdaq gained 3.48, or 0.20%, to 1756.03. For the week, it lost 2.25%, falling for the second straight week.
Friday's economic data showed that consumer confidence dropped in the middle of July.
"No one expects the second-quarter [earnings] to be good," said Marc Pado, U.S. market strategist at Cantor Fitzgerald. Earnings reports so far show that companies are still using cost cuts to prop up their profits and are yet to see sales rebound, he said.
Commodity stocks came under pressure during the week and extended some of those losses Friday. Crude stocks tumbled Friday as crude-oil prices continued to slide. Exxon fell 85 cents, or 1.3%, to 65.12, and lost 4.9% for the week.
Shaw Group fell 2.47, or 9.4%, to 23.69. The engineering and construction company's fiscal third-quarter earnings dropped, partly due to costs related to two fossil contracts.
Investors' focus turned to earnings this week as Alcoa reported results, marking the official start of the earnings season. The aluminum company reported a quarterly loss midweek but topped Wall Street's expectations. Its stock fell 5.3% for the week.
Elsewhere, CME Group fell during the week following news the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission is planning to propose sweeping trading limits on oil, natural gas and possibly other commodities. For the week, the stock lost 12.7%.
Yahoo (Nasdaq) gained 38 cents, or 2.6%, to 14.93. Thomas Weisel upgraded Yahoo to market weight from underweight, saying it believes the company's outlook "is determined more by the operational changes made within the management ranks and less on a potential exogenous event with Microsoft."
American depositary shares of Infosys Technologies (Nasdaq) gained 1.46, or 4.2%, to 35.95. The Indian technology company Friday met some market expectations and beat some other market expectations and posted a rise in its fiscal first-quarter profit.