* GE Q4 profit, revenue top estimates
* Google shares lose early gains, weigh on Nasdaq
* Dow up 0.4 pct, S&P up 0.2 pct, Nasdaq down 0.6 pct
* For up-to-the-minute market news see [STXNEWS/US]
(Updates to close)
By Chuck Mikolajczak
NEW YORK, Jan 21 (Reuters) - The Dow and S&P 500 rose on
Friday as General Electric Co's <GE.N> earnings put a positive
tone on the economic recovery, snapping a two-day losing skid
for the benchmark index.
The Nasdaq was pulled lower by Google <GOOG.O>, ending a
week marked by investors pulling back from outperforming
technology shares.
Shares of General Electric, considered a bellwether for the
economy and corporate America, rose 7.1 percent to $19.74 and
hit their highest intraday level since November 2008. The
stock, the top positive in the Dow, also scored its biggest
daily percentage jump since March 2009.
GE reported stronger-than-expected earnings, helped by the
recovery of its finance arm and a rise in revenue at its
industrial units, including a sharp pickup in sales of
locomotives. [ID:nN21199037]
"Look at the two stocks, where they've been and where they
are. GE has been under a tremendous amount of pressure before
all this started," said Doreen Mogavero, CEO of Mogavero, Lee &
Co. in New York.
"Google has acted very well throughout, so there may be a
little bit more room for growth in GE, might be the thought."
The Dow Jones industrial average <.DJI> rose 49.04 points,
or 0.41 percent, to end at 11,871.84. The Standard & Poor's 500
Index <.SPX> added 3.09 points, or 0.24 percent, to 1,283.35.
The Nasdaq Composite Index <.IXIC> shed 14.75 points, or 0.55
percent, to 2,689.54.
For the week, the Dow rose 0.7 percent, the S&P lost 0.8
percent and the Nasdaq dropped 2.4 percent.
Even with Friday's advance, the S&P snapped a seven-week
streak of gains. But the Dow managed its eighth consecutive
weekly gain, its longest streak since the March through April
run in 2010, in which the index hit a high that stood for six
months.
The S&P 500 is up 8.7 percent since the start of December,
but the index lost more than 1 percent over the past two days.
Many technical and other analysts see the up trend continuing
through at least the first half of the year, but some have
forecast a pullback for the near term.
Google Inc shares were down 2.4 percent at $611.83 after
hitting an intraday high of $641.73 as confidence that CEO
Larry Page would rejuvenate the No. 1 Internet search company
wavered. Late Thursday, Google reported earnings that beat Wall
Street's expectations. For details, see [ID:nSGE70K06G]
The action in Google shares is "not so much Google
earnings, but a factor of the market itself," said Robert
Francello, head of equity trading at Apex Capital in San
Francisco.
"We had such a massive run in the end of December and early
this month, we might be seeing selling into good earnings," he
said. "The long, fast money (is) paring gains and preparing
themselves for some type of consolidation short term."
Investors also contended with options expiration, with
January options on individual stocks set to expire after the
close. The expiry sometimes adds to market volatility.
Tempering some of the earnings optimism were results from
Bank of America Corp <BAC.N>, the latest bank to disappoint
investors.
Bank of America shares fell 2 percent to $14.25 after the
largest U.S. bank by assets reported a second straight
quarterly loss, driven by a $2 billion write-down in its
mortgage business. [ID:nN20144514]
The results follow disappointing results earlier this week
from Goldman Sachs <GS.N> and Wells Fargo <WFC.N>. An index of
bank shares, KBW Banks <.BKX>, was up 1.6 percent, however.
Volume was slightly below average with about 7.96 billion
shares traded on the New York Stock Exchange, the American
Stock Exchange and Nasdaq, just short of last year's estimated
daily average of 8.47 billion.
Advancing stocks outnumbered declining ones on the NYSE by
1,578 to 1,424, while on the Nasdaq, decliners beat advancers
1,549 to 1,073.
(Reporting by Chuck Mikolajczak; Additional reporting by
Caroline Valetkevitch; Editing by Jan Paschal)