Investing.com — US stock futures were muted on Friday, as investors assessed a raft of corporate earnings and fresh growth data out of China. Netflix’s (NASDAQ:) quarterly income tops estimates, highlighting the streaming giant’s drive to prioritize profit over subscriber additions. Elsewhere, gold hits an all-time peak and rises amid strong safe haven demand.
1. Futures muted
US stock futures wavered around the flatline on Friday following a mixed day on Wall Street in the prior session.
By 03:31 ET (07:31 GMT), the contract had dipped by 30 points or 0.1%, had added 4 points or 0.1%, and had risen by 33 points or 0.2%.
Healthcare stocks were some of the worst performers on Thursday, with Elevance Health in particular slumping after the group formerly known as Anthem slashed its full-year profit outlook. Molina Healthcare (NYSE:) and Centene (NYSE:) Corp also slid.
Meanwhile, chipmakers like Micron Technology (NASDAQ:) and Broadcom (NASDAQ:) ticked higher, buoyed by upbeat results from peer Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. But the increases were tempered by weakness in freight transportation firm CSX (NASDAQ:) and athleisure company Lululemon Athletica (NASDAQ:).
By the end of the trading day, the benchmark had inched down marginally, erasing earlier gains, while the tech-heavy inched up slightly and the 30-stock rose by 161 points or 0.4%.
2. Netflix posts most profitable quarter ever
Netflix reported better-than-anticipated quarterly income, in a sign of the streaming giant’s push to emphasize profits over rapid subscriber growth.
The company added 5.07 million subscribers during its third quarter versus 8.76 million net new subscribers in the year-ago period, reflecting a waning impact from a crackdown on password sharing between customers that kicked off in 2023. Even still, the figure topped Wall Street estimates, helping send shares higher in extended hours trading.
Over half of the new subscribers in markets where Netflix’s advertising-supported tier is offered selected the option, signaling some resilience in this crucial segment of the business. The trend helped offset a slate of new releases that Netflix said was “patchier than normal.”
Earnings per share in the quarter came in at $5.40 and revenue rose to $9.83 billion, both above projections.
Net income is forecast to dip in the current quarter, although Netflix plans to roll out price increases in Italy and Spain to help drive revenue. It recently also hiked prices in other parts of the world.
3. Chinese economy grows 4.6% in third quarter
China’s economy expanded at a slower pace in the third quarter, official data showed on Friday, highlighting the challenge facing Beijing as it attempts to reinvigorate sputtering activity in the country.
Chinese gross domestic product grew 4.6% year-on-year in the July-September period, in line with expectations but decelerating from 4.7% in the prior quarter. It was the lowest reading in 18 months, and below the government’s full-year target of 5%.
Beijing has announced a string of stimulus measures over the past three weeks, marking China’s most concentrated efforts yet to shore up sluggish economic growth. A sustained deflationary trend, weak private spending and a prolonged property market crash have been the biggest weights on the world’s second-largest economy.
Equities in China dipped after the release of the data on Friday, but erased those losses later in the session after the People’s Bank of China launched new lending programs designed to boost share buybacks and other equity purchasing.
4. Gold touches record high
Gold prices hit a record high in Asian trade on Friday, extending a multi-year drive higher that has been bolstered by solid safe haven demand.
A closely-contested US presidential election, wider economic uncertainty and geopolitical tensions have given support to the yellow metal.
rose 0.4% to $2,706 per troy ounce, while expiring in December rose 0.5% to $2,720.15 an ounce.
The price of Bitcoin, which is seen by some investors as a hedge to risk similar to gold, gained on Friday as well.
5. Oil rises
Oil prices edged higher Friday, but remained on track for their biggest weekly loss in more than a month on concerns around demand.
By 03:32 ET, the contract climbed 0.3% to $74.66 per barrel, while futures (WTI) traded 0.3% higher at $70.89 per barrel.
Both benchmarks settled higher on Thursday for the first time in five sessions after data showed that official US inventories fell last week, but are still set to fall about 6% this week, their biggest weekly decline since Sept. 2.
Both OPEC and the International Energy Agency cut their forecasts for global oil demand earlier this week due in large part to worries over economic weakness in top oil importer China.
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