Money & Company

| Main |

SanDisk's news flash: Oil prices are a drag on consumers

5:22 PM, May 19, 2008

Have record oil prices finally gotten the stock market’s goat?

A heady early advance on Wall Street today evaporated late in the session as technology stocks suddenly fell off a cliff. And one catalyst -- or excuse -- for the tech sell-off was a plunge in shares of flash-memory card maker SanDisk Corp. after its chief executive, Eli Harari, told analysts that consumer electronics sales were "soft" in April and he raised concerns about the effect of high energy prices on consumers.

Record oil and gasoline prices amount to "a very substantial tax on most consumers and the discretionary-spending impact of that should not be underestimated," Harari said at a conference in New York.

That shouldn’t qualify as a revelation, but shares of Milpitas, Calif.-based SanDisk, whose memory cards are used in digital cameras and cell phones, quickly fell from $31.94 just before Harari’s comments to $29.50, and closed at $30.02, for a drop of 7.5% on the day.

The Nasdaq composite index, which had been up 0.9% before Harari spoke, ended with a loss of 12.76 points, or 0.5%, at 2,516.09. The rest of the market also went south in a hurry, although blue-chip indexes still closed modestly higher. The Dow Jones transportation stock index reached a record high intraday before pulling back. (More on the transports’ wild run here.)

It didn’t help the mood that near-term crude oil futures finished above $127 a barrel for the first time, adding 76 cents to a record $127.05.

Stocks have been showing amazing resilience in the face of the latest surge in oil, as I wrote in this column on Saturday. But everyone has wondered what oil price would finally prove too much.

"The stock market has been going up in spite of the oil rally, but apparently it needed someone to point out the harm this was doing to companies that you normally don't associate with oil problems," said Steve Todd, editor of the Todd Market Forecast, referring to SanDisk’s Harari.

Many Wall Street pros have been warning for weeks that the stock market needed a timeout. SanDisk seems an unlikely candidate to trigger a broad market pullback, but for investors who’ve been itching to take profits Harari may have provided as good an excuse as any.

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/t/trackback/816965/29245726

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference SanDisk's news flash: Oil prices are a drag on consumers:

Comments

Wall Street is in fantasy land if they think 4 dollar gas and a rebound in this "consumer" driven economy are sustainable. Yea those 600 dollar stimulus checks should help for a month or two-then what?

I would like to see at least one major media player check into oil futures speculators on wall strreet. who are they are they foriegn countries bidding our oil up, are they our own countrymen who are gorging at the trough is it corporations that are speculating? shine some light on exactly who is doing it and expose their obscene profits

Embargo food from OPEC members.
End military sales to OPEC members.
If prices do not fall, take targeted military action against OPEC members.
Increase Iraqui oil production from 2 million barrels a day to 10 million barrels a day.

Post a comment
If you are under 13 years of age you may read this message board, but you may not participate.
Here are the full legal terms you agree to by using this comment form.

Comments are moderated, and will not appear until they've been approved.

If you have a TypeKey or TypePad account, please Sign In





Recent Comments
Regulators to Schumer on IndyMac: Please shut up
Director John Reich, Office of Thrift Su...
The week that was: More pain, no gain -- except for OPEC
The headline says More pain, no gain -- ...
comment by plankbob
Regulators to Schumer on IndyMac: Please shut up
Regulation Man: I don't know where it h...
comment by martscan
Regulators to Schumer on IndyMac: Please shut up
First, it is my understanding that Sen. ...
comment by martscan
Regulators to Schumer on IndyMac: Please shut up
To those of you who think that Chuckie d...
comment by RegulationMan
Regulators to Schumer on IndyMac: Please shut up
All I see is that Schumer did the equiva...
comment by M Stephens
Our Blogger
Tom Petruno
Tom Petruno
Tom Petruno has been chronicling financial markets' highs and lows since 1979, and has been the Times' financial columnist since 1990. He writes on markets, corporate finance and the economy, and how it all ties in to individual investors' portfolios.

INVESTING TIPS AND TOOLS

Quote:

Finance Tools

DJIANASDAQSPX