Market Update

Railroads Pull Down Averages

123jump.com Staff
26 Jul, 2006
New York City

It was another days of mixed earnings and worries of slowing economy. Norfolk Southern reported weaker than expected earnings a day after UPS guided investors with lackluster earings forecast. UPS lost 16% in two days of trading and Norfolk lost 8.5%. Getty Images deopped 18% and Choice Hotels lost 24% on earnings disappointments. Amazon lost 22% on expected loss in the third quarter. Boeing dropped 4.6% on $1 billion of charges. GM gained 4.37% on better than expected rise in sales.

Europe Gains on Earnings

Elena
26 Jul, 2006
New York City

European markets finished in the positive as gains for companies like Reuters and Syngenta offset losses in the automotive sector. Mining stocks also contributed to the positive sentiment, with Arcelor climbing 9%, and Xstrata rising 0.5%. The German DAX 30 rose 0.4%, the French CAC 40 gained 0.2%, and London FTSE 100 climbed 0.4%.

Norfolk Drags Transportation Stocks

Elena
26 Jul, 2006
New York City

Disappointing earnings from Amazon.com and Boeing Co. helped pull the consumer discretionary and industrials sectors lower. Although General Motors posted strong quarterly results, transportation stocks sharply dropped as railway company Norfolk Southern said Q2 profit fell on higher fuel costs. Shares of Amazon slipped 17%, Norfolk Southern declined 12%, while General Motors advanced 4.5%. Dow component Boeing declined 4.4% on Q2 loss versus a year ago profit.

Third Day of Rally in India

Elena
26 Jul, 2006
New York City

Sensex gained on the back of Asian rally which was led by a steep rise in the U.S. market. The third day of rally was supported by a flood of earnings. Bharti Airtel reported earnings gain of 48% and ONGC reported earnings advance of 24%. Sensex third advance was marked by a volatile trading and low turnover.

Boeing Profit Slides on Charges

Elena
26 Jul, 2006
New York City

Stocks opened lower on profit taking after recent rally. Boeing Co. fell 4.6% after it reported a Q2 $160 million loss on more than $1 billion in charges. Black & Decker reported Q2 net profit increased 0.9% from a year ago to $1.98 a share, while sales declined 0.1% to $1.697 billion. Amazon fell 17% after it released a disappointing quarterly report, putting pressure on the Internet sector. Getty Images dropped 15% on 35% profit drop for the second quarter.

GM Gains on Operating Profit

Elena
26 Jul, 2006
New York City

U.S. stock futures pointed to a mixed opening on earnings reports from Amazon and GM. Amazon dropped 13% as the company lowered its profit outlook, while General Motors rose 4% in pre-market trading. The automaker posted Q2 profit loss of $5.62 per share vs. a loss of $1.75 last year on heavy restructuring charges, but operating profit well above estimates and 12% sales growth.

Blackstone Considers Bid for HCA

Elena
26 Jul, 2006
New York City

On Monday a group of private equity firms, including Bain Capital, Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co. and Merrill Lynch & Co offered $21.3 billion for HCA. Terms of the agreement give Bain, KKR and Merrill the right to top any counteroffer. Blackstone hasn''t yet invited other private-equity firms to join any potential offer.

Amazon.com Plunges 10%

123jump.com Staff
25 Jul, 2006
New York City

Amazon.com reported earnings of 5 cents vs. 12 cents a year ago on revenue rise of 22%. The company also guided third quarter revenue rise of between 17% and 25% and earnings to drop between 24% and 87%. The stock lost more than $3 in the after hours trading.

UPS, 3M and TI Earnings Drive Market

123jump.com Staff
25 Jul, 2006
New York City

Consumer sentiment rose despite higher oil and commodity prices and housing market report showed another sign of slow but steady decline in the market. Inventory of unsold homes rose. McDonlad''s, Altria, Texas Instruments and SanDisk reported solid advance. UPS plunged 10% on the third quarter earnings guidance. European and Latin Markets closed higher. Oil declined but gold rose a fraction.

Commodities Help Europe

Elena
25 Jul, 2006
Frankfurt

European markets closed largely in the positive. Upbeat market sentiment was generated by strength in the mining sector and several earnings reports. Commodities stocks like Rio Tinto and Anglo-American advanced over 0.8%, boosted by an increase in commodities prices. The French CAC 40 rose 0.4%, London FTSE 100 gained 0.3%, while DAX 30 declined 0.2%.

Sensex in India Up 1.9%

Elena
25 Jul, 2006
Mumbai

Market took the interest rate hike in stride and gained 1.9% on solid earnings, rally in other Asian markets and comfort with strong consumer spending. Daily turnover in the market is still at its worst level of the year with the persistent worries that international investors may withdraw funds from the Indian stock market. Tata Motors reported 40% rise in profit after the close of trading hours.

Consumer Confidence Rises Unexpectedly

Elena
25 Jul, 2006
New York City

Stocks traded in a lackluster fashion, reflexing mixed earnings news and an unexpected jump in consumer confidence. The Conference Board said consumer confidence index for July rose 1.1 points to 106.5, vs. predictions of a 1.4-point drop. According to another report, existing home sales fell 1.3% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 6.62 million units in June from an upwardly revised rate of 6.71 million units in May.

UPS Drops 14% on Lowered Outlook

Elena
25 Jul, 2006
New York City

U.S. stocks opened flat due to a mixed batch of earnings reports and rising oil. United Parcel Service, delivery company, said that its Q2 net income jumped to 97 cents a share from 88 cents a share a year ago on 15% sales growth, but lowered its Q3 outlook. McDonald''s Corp. said Q2 net income advanced 57% to 67 cents a share from 42 cents a share a year earlier.

TI Posts Strong Growth and Outlook

Elena
25 Jul, 2006
New York City

U.S. stock futures pointed to a flat opening, taking a break from yesterday

Japan to Resume U.S. Beef Imports

Elena
25 Jul, 2006
New York City

Japan banned U.S. beef earlier this year amid concerns about mad cow disease, but agreed to resume imports last month on condition that Japanese inspectors found no problems at U.S. plants. Japanese officials have not decided what to do if any problems are found at the U.S. plants.