-- US equity indexes were mixed on Friday as earnings helped lift technology and communication services, while President Donald Trump expressed displeasure with Iran's revised peace proposal.
The Nasdaq Composite jumped 0.9% to 25,114.44, albeit off session highs. The S&P 500 rose 0.3% to 7,230.12, also retreating from intraday highs. Both indexes hit new records earlier in the session. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 0.3% to 49,499.27, giving up gains.
All sectors except technology and consumer discretionary fell. Energy and materials led the decliners.
Iran handed Washington a new proposal for ending the war, offering hints of compromise, The Wall Street Journal reported Friday. But the two sides remain far apart on substantive issues of reopening the Strait of Hormuz and Iran's nuclear program, people familiar with the matter told the WSJ.
"They want to make a deal, but I'm not satisfied with it," Trump told reporters at the White House, according to Bloomberg. "We just had a conversation with Iran. Let's see what happens. But I would say that I am not happy."
Separately, Trump notified Congress on Friday that hostilities against Iran ended in April, reflected by an indefinite extension of the two-week ceasefire, allowing the White House to bypass a 60-day deadline for lawmakers to approve the war, according to the WSJ.
West Texas Intermediate crude oil futures remained lower, down 3% to $102.07 late Friday. Brent crude futures were also lower by 2% to $108.45.
In precious metals, gold futures slipped 0.1% to $4,623.7, while silver futures jumped 2.7% to $76.02.
US Treasury yields were mixed, with the 10-year 1.6 basis points lower to 4.37%. The two-year yield was slightly higher at 3.89%.
In company news, Apple (AAPL) jumped 3.2%, the Dow's second-biggest gainer, after the iPhone manufacturer overnight reported a year-over-year surge in fiscal Q2 earnings and revenue. Apple's board also raised its quarterly dividend and approved a share buyback program of up to $100 billion.
In the final leg of trading, Oracle (ORCL), Intel (INTC), and Micron Technology (MU) led the outperformers among companies with a market capitalization of more than $200 billion, according to data compiled by Finviz. In the top 10 gainers from this category, half were either software or semiconductor companies.
In economic news, the Atlanta Federal Reserve's Q2 gross domestic product Nowcast came in at 3.5%, down from 3.7% previously estimated.
The Institute for Supply Management's US manufacturing index was unchanged in April at 52.7, below the 53.2 reading expected in a Bloomberg survey. The S&P Global US manufacturing index for April was revised upwards to 54.5 from the flash 54.0, compared with expectations for no revision in a Bloomberg-compiled survey.