Investing.com– The S&P 500 closed sharply lower Thursday as Meta and Microsoft fueled a rout in tech, while hotter inflation muddied the path for deeper Federal Reserve rate cuts.  

At 4.00 p.m. ET (2000 GMT), the was down 378 points, or 0.9%, the index fell 1.9%, and the dropped 2.8%.

Microsoft, Meta slump on increased expenses outlook

Meta Platforms Inc (NASDAQ:) slumped more than 4% after it racked up fewer than expected users in Q3 and detailed plans to boost spending offsetting better-than-expected earnings and revenue. 

“Uncertainty related to 2025 investment growth will likely limit near-term margin expectations despite the company’s 3Q beat,” Wedbush said in a note.

Microsoft Corporation (NASDAQ:), meanwhile, fell nearly 6% as the tech giant’s weaker guidance overshadowed fiscal Q1 results that topped estimates.

Analysts at Oppenheimer, however, were quick to downplay the weaker guidance, saying it was “conservative.” 

“While investors may be hung up on the optics of decelerating Azure growth paired with substantial CapEx, we see a path to upward revisions, and would be a buyer on weakness,” they added.

Quarterly earnings continue

There were more earnings to digest Thursday, as the results season continued apace.

eBay (NASDAQ:) stock fell 8% after the ecommerce firm reported disappointing guidance for the crucial holiday shopping season.

Robinhood (NASDAQ:) stock slumped 16% after the trading platform reported that its third-quarter earnings missed expectations, although crypto trading volume and revenue doubled year-on-year.

Uber Technologies (NYSE:) stock fell 9% after the ride-hailing firm’s gross bookings grew at its slowest pace in over a year, even as it edged past quarterly profit estimates.

Estee Lauder (NYSE:) stock slumped 21% after the cosmetics giant reported a revenue miss and withdrew its fiscal 2025 outlook amid ongoing challenges in China and travel retail.

Inflation comes in a hot ahead of Fed meeting next week 

Data released earlier showed that an inflation metric closely monitored by the Federal Reserve slowed to a 2.1% during the month, cooling from an upwardly-revised reading of 2.3% in August.

Meanwhile, the so-called , which strips out more volatile items like food and fuel, came in at 2.7% annually — faster than expectations of 2.6% and equaling August’s pace.

Separately on Thursday,  for first-time unemployment benefits dipped to 216,000 from 228,000 in the prior week.

The figures come as Fed officials contemplate their next policy decision after they moved to cut borrowing costs by an outsized 50 basis points in September.

Friday sees the release of the latest data, which could provide further guidance for the Fed officials as they meet next week.

 

(Ambar Warrick and Senad Karaahmetovic contributed to this article.)

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