Freitag, 31. Juli 2009

Market Winners & Losers: Goodyear, Akamai

The major indices took a nice step into the positive Thursday on a better-than-expected Treasury auction and a stream of earnings reports. The Dow closed up 0.9%, the S&P gained 1.2% and the Nasdaq added 0.8%.

Here are Thursday’s winners and losers:

Winners

Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. (GT)
Despite reporting a quarterly loss, the tire manufacturer beat the Street’s estimates and shares gained 14.2%. GT closed at $15.86, a gain of $1.97.

Hartford Financial Services Group Inc. (HIG)
Hartford Financial reported better-than-expected earnings and narrowed its guidance, sending shares higher by 13.6%. HIG shares last traded at $16.99, a gain of $2.03 on the day.

Wynn Resorts Ltd. (WYNN)
The casino-resort company posted better-than-expected earnings and the stock responded positively, adding 13.2%. WYNN shares ended the session at $50.15, a gain of $5.84.

CIT Group Inc. (CIT)
CIT lead the bank-holding companies on Thursday, closing up 12.8%. CIT finished trading at 88 cents, a 10 cent gain on the day.

Lincoln National Corp. (LNC)
The insurance giant led the sector after reporting earnings Wednesday, with shares gaining 12.4%. LNC closed Thursday at $20.29, a gain of $2.24.

Losers

Akamai Technologies Inc. (AKAM)
Poor quarterly guidance and results pushed the Internet service-provider down 19.1%. AKAM last traded at $16.51, a loss of $3.89.

Symantec Corp. (SYMC)
The Internet security provider fell 14.3% on less-that-stellar quarterly results. SYMC finished the session at $14.78, a loss of $2.46.

Avery Dennison Corp. (AVY)
A major drop in earnings cost the pressure-sensitive materials maker 10.6% on Thursday. AVY ended the session at $26.65, a loss of $3.16 on the day.

Eastman Kodak Co. (EK)
Kodak closed down 10.4% on poor yearly outlook. The film and camera manufacturer closed at $2.94, down 34 cents on the day.

MetroPCS Communications Inc. (PCS)
A Baird downgrade dropped the mobile-phone company 9.7%. PCS ended Thursday at $11.69, a loss of $1.25 on the day.

Market Winners & Losers: Starbucks, Allegheny TechnologiesWall St. seeks to extend rally

'Cash for Clunkers' Program Seems to Get New Life

The “Cash for Clunkers” program appeared Friday morning to have been given new life.

After a report Thursday night that House members were being told the program was out of money, on Friday morning Obama Administration officials said it was still going strong, and FOX learned that House Democrats were planning to give the program another $2 billion to keep running

“If you want to buy a car this weekend, the program is absolutely up and running,” Council of Economic Advisors Chairman Christina Romer told FOX Business.

Romer was echoing comments from White House spokesman Robert Gibbs on Friday morning saying that Cash for Clunkers was “extremely successful” and that it was benefiting buyers, sellers and auto makers. Gibbs said the Administration was working with Congress to find a solution to the reports that Cash for Clunkers had run out of money.

The scramble to add cash comes in the wake of reports that the program appeared to be too popular for its own good.

A House leadership staffer told FOX Business on Thursday that House members were being informed by the Department of Transportation that the program was either out of money or would be by the time all the deals were processed.

As FOX Business’s Brian Sullivan reported on Wednesday, the allocation of $1 billion for the program averaged out to just 12.5 vehicles per dealer, which given the program’s popularity, didn’t seem to be enough.

“Cash for Clunkers,” officially the Car Allowance Rebate System, gives money to people who trade in certain qualified vehicles and buy vehicles that are more fuel-efficient. So trading in, say, an old SUV and getting a Ford (F) Focus or Toyota (TM) Prius would likely make the car owner eligible for the program. The traded-in cars aren’t able to be re-sold -- their engines must be rendered unusable by the dealers.

The program’s Web site said as of Thursday evening that $779 million remained in the program, with $75 million remaining for CAT3 trucks.

--FOX Business's Peter Barnes and FOX News's Chad Pergram contributed to this article.

Red-Hot Stocks Cool OffPsychiatric Solutions selling business unit for $70 million

Samstag, 25. Juli 2009

Stocks End Mixed; Microsoft Plunges

The bulls battled the bears to a draw on Friday as stocks ended mixed on disappointing earnings reports from Microsoft and American Express.

Today’s Markets

The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed up 23.95 points, or 0.26% at 9093.24, the Standard & Poor's 500 rose 3.02 points, or 0.31%, to 979.31 and the Nasdaq Composite dropped 7.64 points, or 0.39%, to 1965.96. The consumer-friendly FOX 50 fell 1.31 points, or 0.18%, to 715.57.

Wall Street had an amazing run this week, but the rally stalled on Friday. The Nasdaq Composite was up 12 days in a row before retreating today and the Dow plowed through the 9,000 mark for the first time since January this week.

Microsoft (MSFT) shares plunged in heavy trading after the company reported its first drop in annual sales since the company went public in the early 1980s.

Microsoft said fiscal fourth-quarter income fell 29% to $3.05 billion, or 34 cents a share, two cents shy of the 36 cents expected by analysts. Revenue fell 29% from a year ago to $3.11 billion.

The software maker's shares dragged down several other technology companies, including Intel Corp. (INTC), Dell (DELL), and Dow member Hewlett-Packard (HPQ). Online retailer Amazon.com (AMZN) shares were also down 7% after disappointing earnings last night as well.

Shares of American Express (AXP) fell after the company reported Thursday second-quarter net income were 27 cents a share, one cent higher than analysts' estimates. However the company said revenue for the quarter was $6.1 billion, well short of the $6.3 billion expected by analysts.

Despite the major drop in Microsoft and AmEx, stocks were only moderately lower - a sign on how bullish Wall Street traders have been since the start of earnings season.According to Thomson Reuters, 76% of the companies who have reported this earnings season have beaten analysts' expectations.

Traders said as long as there aren't any major red flags in the economy or in company reports, the market may continue to trend higher at least in the near term.

"You can't ignore a 11% move in stocks in nine days, this has been an incredible market," said NYSE trader Doreen Mogavero. "I think everyone is starting to feel a whole lot better."

Wall Street also got a University of Michigan consumer sentiment that showed consumer sentiment dropped for the first time since February. The Reuters/University of Michigan consumer sentiment fell to a reading of 66.0, from 70.8 in June. The drop was less than the reading of 64.6 expected by economists, according to Thomson Reuters.

For commodities, oil was up 84 cents at $68.02 a barrel while gold fell $3.10 to $951.70 a troy ounce.

Company News

Citigroup (C) announced the appointment of three new members to its Board of Directors on Friday, including the former superintendent of the New York State Banking Department. In a statement, Citigroup said that Diana Taylor, Timothy Collins and Robert Joss would join the now 17-member board, of which only Citigroup CEO Vikram Pandit is a member of the company’s management.

Black& Decker (BDK) said it earned 63 cents a share, much better than the 37 cents expected by analysts. Sales fell 24% during the quarter, and expects that the decline will continue throughout the year.

Oil driller Schlumberger (SLB), said it earned $613 million, or 51 cents a share, as revenue decreased 18% to $5.53 billion, primarily on lower oil revenues and a decrease in profit margin. The latest quarter included 17 cents in restructuring charges. On an adjusted basis, Schlumberger beat the 63 cents expected by analysts, but fell short on the revenue side.

Amazon.com (AMZN) saw its profit decline 10% to $142 million, or 32 cents a share, from $158 million, or 37 cents a share, a year earlier. While sales rose to $4.65 billion from $4.06 billion a year ago, the results were impaired partially on a big drop in video game sales and other high-margin goods.

Fortune Brands (FO), the maker of Moen faucets and Maker's Mark whiskey, reported a second-quarter adjusted profit of 70 cents a share, two cents better than what the Street was looking for. Sales for the quarter came in at $1.74 billion. Fortune, which also makes Titleist golf balls, said they are seeing lower discretionary spending in all its divisions, most notably in home products and golf.

Heavy industry company Ingersoll-Rand (IR) said it earned an adjusted 50 cents a share, well above the 39 cents a share predicted by Wall Street analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters.

The Wall Street Journal reported that JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM) will increase salaries for its investment bankers, in an effort to make their compensation more competitive with rivals. The changes would be implemented in 2010, with details will being announced later this year. While employees would get a bigger salary, bonuses will probably decrease, keeping the level of salaries similar to previous years.

Global Markets

In London, the FTSE 100 Index closed up 0.37% to 4576.61 while Paris' CAC 40 gained 0.22% to 3366.45 and Germany's DAX gained 0.34% to 5229.36.

In Asia, Japan's Nikkei gained 1.55% to 9944.55 while Hong Kong's Hang Seng rose 0.83% to 19982.79. China's Shanghai Composite jumped 1.33% to 3372.60.

Wall St. seeks to extend rallyRed-Hot Stocks Cool Off

Cavuto: Health-Care Thing Losing Ground to Harvard Professor Thing

Missed Friday's Cavuto ? Catch "The Deal" right here on FOXBusiness.com

What do you think this controversial arrest of Professor Henry Gates has to do with the economy?

What if I told you nothing, and everything?

It has nothing to do with the economy.

But it has everything to do with one of the biggest fixes for the economy.

Here's the deal:

That health-care thing is so yesterday.

This professor arrest thing is so now.

Here's why.

Everyone's talking about this arrest and whether it was bungled.

And not about health care and whether it "is" bungled.

Bad for health care.

And bad for the President, who right about now is looking stupid earlier this week calling the arrest of this professor stupid, or the folks arresting him for handling it "stupidly."

Which is why he kind of took the stupid comment back today, though not quite apologizing for it today, in a hastily arranged presser today.

To answer a Cambridge police presser earlier today, that revealed some policemen not at all tickled with the President today.

All the news networks carried that presser.

And the President's presser on that presser.

The same ones that up until now had been carrying anything health care.

Now none of them are.

More momentum for coverage of arresting Harvard professors than ideas for arresting health-care inflation.

I'm not saying it's right.

Or fair.

Just that it is.

If only the President hadn't taken that last question on the professor's arrest then.

His health care might not look like it's under arrest now.

But he did.

And it is.

And he's gotta be feeling sick over all this.

Because he's not only lost momentum for his health-care plan.

He might have lost something else.

His health-care plan itself.

Chief Economic Advisor Defends Stimulus PackageTwo tax plans would take a big bite from the rich

Freitag, 24. Juli 2009

Market Winners & Losers: Starbucks, Allegheny Technologies

The major indices finished the day mixed, with the Dow ending its seven-day hot streak and the Nasdaq plowing ahead to round out its eleventh day in the green. The Dow closed down 0.4%, the S&P dropped 0.05%, and the Nasdaq added 0.5%.

Here are Wednesday’s winners and losers:

Winners

Starbucks Corp. (SBUX)
The luxury coffee shop saw its shares skyrocket 18.4% on its quarterly earnings release. SBUX last traded at $17.39, a gain of $2.70 on the day.

Linear Technology Corp. (LLTC)
The circuit manufacturer closed with an 8.3% gain as the company beat the Street’s fourth-quarter earnings estimates. LLTC ended the session at $27.11, a gain of $2.07.

Lennar Corp. (LEN)
The homebuilder led the sector higher on Wednesday, with shares jumping 7.7%. LEN closed at $10.62, a gain of 76 cents on the day.

Novell Inc. (NOVL)
The software company helped keep the Nasdaq in positive territory Wednesday, with shares closing up 7.1%. NOVL last traded at $4.68, a gain of 31 cents on the day.

KeyCorp. (KEY)
The regional bank closed up 7.1% on a narrower-than-expected quarterly loss. KEY last traded at $5.16, a gain of 34 cents on the day.

Losers

Allegheny Technologies Inc. (ATI)
The metals producer saw its shares sink by 18.1% Wednesday as the company swung to a loss in the second quarter. ATI last traded at $28.50, a loss of $6.29 on the day.

Advanced Micro Devices Inc. (AMD)
The chip manufacturer got hit hard with a 13% loss on quarterly losses. AMD closed the session at $3.55, a loss of 53 cents.

CIT Group Inc. (CIT)
CIT continued its losing trend, falling 11.2% on Wednesday as bankruptcy still hovers over investors’ heads. CIT ended trading at 87 cents, a loss of 11 cents on the day.

Whirlpool Corp. (WHR)
Another stock crushed by quarterly earnings, Whirlpool fell 9.9% as profit fell by more than 30%. WHR closed Wednesday at $50.75, a loss of $5.59.

St. Jude Medical Inc. (STJ)
The medical service and equipment provider saw its shares fall 8.9% Wednesday despite meeting the Street’s earnings estimates. STJ ended trading at $36.08, a loss of $3.52 on the day.

Market Winners & Losers: Mattel, GEWall St. seeks to extend rally

Section by Section of Republican Plan


Section by Section of Republican Plan

Two tax plans would take a big bite from the richEx-GM CEO Wagoner Retires With Reduced Benefits

Montag, 20. Juli 2009

Chief Economic Advisor Defends Stimulus Package

Speaking to the Peterson Institute Friday, White House economic advisor Larry Summers said “the American economy is again in progress.”

Summers detailed the efforts of the Obama Administrations stimulus package and discussed the progress made so far saying, “The distance we have traveled these past six months is remarkable.”

Referring to the economic state at the start of the year as a “free-fall” with no clear end in sight, Summers discussed the intended outcome for the stimulus plan and the future of U.S. markets.

Many Republicans are criticizing the $780 billion economic stimulus package, saying it has had little to no impact on the economy. Much of the stimulus has yet to be spent and won’t be until next July, Rep. Scott Garrett (R-N.J.) told FOX Business.

Although employment is a big concern right now, Summers stated that “contrary to a significant amount of commentary, this does not provide a basis for concluding that the Recovery Act is falling short of its goals."

The Obama Administration is hopeful that a rise in gross domestic product will lead to an increase in employment and spending, and therefore boost the economy to help pull the U.S. out of recession.

Summers also said the American economy needs to be restructured to become “more export-oriented and less consumption-oriented,” “more environmentally oriented and less fossil-energy-oriented,” “more bio- and software-engineering-oriented and less financial-engineering-oriented,” “more middle-class-oriented and less oriented to income growth that disproportionately favors a very small share of the population."

In order to attract future investors, America must prove that federal debt is under control and reassure businesses that the United States remains the most competitive market, Summers added.

Summers reiterated that a recovery could not take place overnight, and that only time could show the success of the stimulus package.

“Confidence and hope are returning as a program of rebuilding the economy moves forward,” he said.=

FOXBusiness.com’s Week in Review: July 6-10, 2009Don’t let summer’s laze reach your wallet

Al Lewis: Don't Know Much About Bankruptcy

There's still a lot I don't know about bankruptcy, but I seem to learn more every week.

I did not know that the Chicago Cubs had yet to file bankruptcy, primarily because they are the Cubs.

The Cubs haven't won a World Series since my grandparents were teenagers, and they are now too dead to remember it. Yet somehow this team that I grew up cheering in complete futility wasn't really busted when its owner, the Tribune Co., filed bankruptcy in December.

This week, Tribune executives hinted that they might file a Cubs bankruptcy after all. They say this would be just a technical, legal process to prepare the team for a sale, not a tacit admission that the Cubs really have been cursed since infamously ejecting a stinky, old goat from the World Series it lost in 1945.

I also did not know it was still possible for companies to get debtor-in-possession financing given the credit crunch. Seattle clothier Eddie Bauer Holdings Inc., however, recently got $100 million in DIP financing.

The loot came from lenders that required a few emergency loans themselves, Bank Of America Corp. (BAC), GE Capital and CIT Group Inc. (CIT).

I did not know CIT still had money to lend with all the talk of it having to file bankruptcy if the government doesn't rescue it any minute.

I did not know you could use the bankruptcy court to find out exactly what Wayne Gretzky is doing with his money. The Great One makes about $7 million a year as coach of the National Hockey League's Phoenix Coyotes, which is in bankruptcy, and not because it's stupidly expensive to make ice in a burning desert.

The city of Glendale, a creditor, has filed a motion seeking Gretzky's tax returns.

"Mr. Gretzky is....one of the most recognizable sports figures in the history of the United States," Coyotes lawyers wrote in trying to block the motion. "His privacy interest...outweighs (Glendale's) need for disclosure of Mr. Gretzky's personal tax records."

I did not know the failing state of California could issue IOUs. I always thought IOUs were only used in cartoons, like when Wimpy needed Popeye to buy him a hamburger.

I did not know that someone could guide Chrysler and GM through bankruptcy in less than 45 days, while enduring scrutiny from an influence-peddling scandal. But Steven Rattner, who just resigned as "car czar," was simply amazing. Why can't the entire U.S. government do this and be done with it already?

I did not know that bankruptcy is a path to global competitiveness. But I am not Gary Peters, a U.S. representative from Michigan: "With bankruptcy in the rearview mirror, U.S. auto companies will...become more globally competitive." Better check that mirror, though: "Objects may be closer than they appear."

I did not know any newspaper still had $1 million left. But Journal Register Co., publisher of New Haven (Conn.) Register and other newspapers, is coming out of Chapter 11 with court-approved plans to pay its executives $1.3 million in bonuses. Given our national economic priority to reward failure, I did not know this could be a problem, but Connecticut Attorney General Richard Blumenthal issued this statement:

"This decision means that bankruptcy is no bar against bloated big-time bonuses...The...ruling means that executives will be substantially rewarded more than $1.3 million in blatantly undeserved bonuses for shutting down newspapers and laying off employees."

I still do not know how much the lawyers will make searching for Bernie Madoff's assets. So far, a Manhattan law firm working with a court-appointed trustee has run up a $14.6 million tab.

The hunt "has unearthed a labyrinth of interrelated international funds, institutions and entities of almost unparalleled complexity and breadth," the trustee recently wrote in a report.

Madoff victim Candace Newlove of Nederland, Colo., had already suggested a much simpler solution: Hang "him by his toes for 12 years." That ought to shake loose some change.

Also, I did not know people can't get away with everything in bankruptcy court like some companies do. Donald Ferguson of Fromberg, Mont., was sentenced on Wednesday to 3 1/2 years in prison for bankruptcy fraud, according to a report by The Associated Press.

Prosecutors alleged he made frivolous court filings to delay foreclosure on his house and tried to pay his taxes with checks from a closed bank account.

Geez, isn't that what bankruptcy is all about?

(Al's Emporium, written by Dow Jones Newswires columnist Al Lewis, offers commentary and analysis on a wide range of business subjects through an unconventional perspective. The column is published each Tuesday and Thursday at 9 a.m. ET. Contact Al at al.lewis@dowjones.com or tellittoal.com)

Ex-GM CEO Wagoner Retires With Reduced BenefitsExperts point out where good buys might be

Sonntag, 19. Juli 2009

Market Winners & Losers: Whirlpool, CIT

The bulls continued their stampede on Thursday with the Dow closing up 1.1%, the S&P up 0.9% and the Nasdaq added 1.2%.

Here are Thursday’s winners and losers:

Winners

Whirlpool Corp. (WHR)
Whirlpool got a boost from AB Electrolux’s positive earnings results, with shares gaining 9.1%. The stock closed at $54.40, a gain of $4.53 on the day.

SanDisk Corp. (SNDK)
The semiconductor-manufacturer led the tech sector Thursday as it gained 9.1% to close the session. SNDK added $1.47 a share to $17.67.

Harley-Davidson Inc. (HOG)
The motorcycle giant roared into positive territory after it announced a good outlook for the remainder of 2009. HOG finished up 8.4%, or $1.47, to settle at $18.96.

FedEx Corp. (FDX)
The courier lead the transportation sector higher Thursday, with shares closing up 7.7%. FDX closed at $61.79, a gain of $1.37 on the day.

Massey Energy Co. (MEE)
A deal with Foundation Coal Holdings boosted shares of Massey Energy by 7.1%. MEE finished Thursday up $1.37 at $49.27.

Losers

CIT Group Inc. (CIT)
With a possible bankruptcy looming, the financial lender plummeted 75% on Thursday. CIT closed down 41 cents at $1.23.

American International Group Inc. (AIG)
The financial company followed CIT’s lead, with shares dropping10.3% to close the session. AIG lost $1.47 and settled at $12.75.

Marriott International Inc. (MAR)
The hotel chain posted a lower quarterly profit, causing shares to fall 6.2%. MAR closed down $1.36 to $20.44.

Citigroup Inc. (C)
Another financial feeling the CIT strain, Citigroup shares posted a 4.4% loss on Thursday. Citi ended the session down 14 cents at $3.03.

Motorola Inc. (MOT)
A Goldman Sachs downgrade dropped shares of the mobile-phone company 4.2% to end the session. MOT shares lost 28 cents to settle at $6.33.

Market Winners & Losers: Mattel, GE

Market Winners & Losers: Mattel, GE

The bulls could not pull all the indices into positive territory to end the week as the S&P fell during the last minute rally Friday. The Dow closed up 0.4%, the S&P lost 0.04%, and the Nasdaq gained 0.1%.

Here are Friday’s winners and losers:

Winners:

CIT Group Inc. (CIT)

CIT breathed a sigh of relief at the close of the week as it looked to the public sector for liquidity. The small business lender’s shares jumped 70.7%, or 29 cents, to close at 70 cents.

Mattel Inc. (MAT)

The toy manufacturer’s stock ended up 7.6% on a gain in quarterly profit. MAT last traded at $17.42, a gain of $1.23.

American International Group Inc. (AIG)

The financial giant’s stock rose 6% on news that it’s working quickly to get its spin-off ALICO trading on the NYSE. AIG closed up 77 cents at $13.52 a share.

Gannett Co. Inc. (GCI)

The USAToday publisher’s shares added 4.8% at the close of the week. GCI finished at $4.78, a gain of 22 cents.

International Business Machines Corp. (IBM)

Big Blue rocked quarterly earnings and investors responded, as the stock gained 4.3% Friday. IBM closed up $4.78 at $115.42 a share.

Losers:

Marshall & Ilsley Corp. (MI)

The regional bank lost 12.3% on a drop in loan quality despite better- than-expected quarterly results. MI finished the session down 65 cents at $4.63 a share.

Kimco Realty Corp. (KIM)

The REIT dropped 10.6% on news that Regency Centers Corp. would cut its yearly target. KIM dropped 97 cents, closing at $8.22 a share.

Zions Bancorp (ZION)

Another regional bank posting a loss to end the week, Zions’ shares fell 6.8%. ZION closed at $11.56, a loss of 84 cents.

BB&T Corp. (BBT)

The bank’s shares fell 6.2% on a quarterly loss. BBT last traded down $1.39, closing at $20.94 a share.

General Electric Co. (GE)

Hurt by CIT, the stock dropped 6.1% as investors were worried about the effect CIT’s troubles would have on GE Capital. The conglomerate closed at $11.65, a loss of 75 cents.

Market Winners & Losers: Gannett, Yum Brands

Donnerstag, 16. Juli 2009

Red-Hot Stocks Cool Off

Wall Street's recent hot streak ran into a roadblock Thursday as the markets flatlined even after JPMorgan Chase became the latest financial giant to blow analysts' earnings estimates out of the water.

Today’s Markets

As of 12:34 p.m. EDT, the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 8.32 points, or 0.13%, to 8628.84, the Standard & Poor's 500 slid 0.51 points, or 0.05%, to 932.17 and the Nasdaq Composite picked up 4.85 points, or 0.26%, to 1867.86. The consumer-friendly FOX 50 dropped 0.88 points, or 0.13%, to 690.27.

For the third-straight morning, a major company reported quarterly results that blew Wall Street’s expectations out of the water. The slew of better-than-expected results from Goldman Sachs (GS), Intel (INTC) and Thursday morning JPMorgan Chase (JPM) have allowed last week’s earnings jitters to fade away.

Aside from the JPMorgan results, the markets were influenced in by new labor data, the latest developments surrounding teetering commercial lender CIT Group (CIT) and a pullback in oil prices.

While the markets started without much life Thursday, Wall Street is still on track for huge gains this week, which would be the first weekly gain in more than a month. The Dow had climbed more than 450 points over the prior three days, including 257 points on Wednesday, amid new evidence that some of America's best companies are thriving despite the still-weak economy.

Half of the Dow's 30 members were in the green Thursday, led by Disney (DIS) and Cisco (CSCO). The index's biggest percentage losers were JPMorgan and Bank of America (BAC).

JPMorgan, which earlier this year repaid its TARP cash, reported an adjusted-quarterly profit of $2.7 billion, or 28 cents a share. The results easily beat the Street’s view of a profit of 6 cents per share.

While JPMorgan’s net revenue soared by 41%, the bank set aside more than twice as much as last year for bad loans and added another $2 billion to credit reserves. After surging in anticipation of the results on Wednesday, JPMorgan and the financial sector fell about 1% in afternoon action.

Earnings will stay in focus even after Thursday’s session as tech giants IBM (IBM) and Google (GOOG) are set to report results after the bell and financial titans General Electric (GE), Citigroup (C) and Bank of America (BAC) are slated to report Friday.

On the economic front, the Labor Department issued an encouraging unemployment report Thursday but warned that technical figures may have impacted the figures.

The government said initial jobless claims tumbled by 47,000 last week to 522,000. Economists surveyed by Dow Jones Newswires anticipated claims to have declined to 513,000. At the same time, the data showed continuing claims plunged by 642,000 -- the largest drop on record.

Also, the Philadelphia Fed said its manufacturing survey index deteriorated more than expected in July. The index tumbled from -2.2 last month to -7.5 this month, worse than the -5 expected by economists polled by Dow Jones.

Meanwhile, Wall Street appeared to be mostly unfazed to the potential collapse of CIT Group, underscoring the change in sentiment since the darkest days of the credit crisis. CIT's shares plummeted nearly 80% to new 52-week lows as talks over a government rescue fell apart overnight, increasing the chances CIT will need to file for bankruptcy, possibly as soon as this week.

In the commodity markets, crude oil cooled off after surging more than $2 on Thursday, its biggest one-day gain since June 4. In recent trading, crude was off by 43 cents a barrel, or 0.71%, to $61.11

Corporate Movers

Bank of America (BAC) is operating under a secret regulatory sanction that requires it to overhaul its board and address perceived problems with risk and liquidity management, The Wall Street Journal reported Thursday. Citigroup (C) has been operating under a similar order since last year and is negotiating an agreement with the FDIC, the paper reported.

Nokia (NOK), the world’s largest phone maker, disclosed a 66% plunge in second-quarter net income but said it sees demand bottoming out.

Marriott (MAR) weighed in with a better-than-expected 76% plunge in net income in the second quarter Thursday amid weak demand for lodging in the global recession. Citing the “very unpredictable” global business climate, the hotel declined to give an outlook, weighing on its shares.

Charles Schwab (SCHW) reported an in-line 31% drop in quarterly profit amid a 7% decline in revenue and restructuring costs.

Global Markets

European stocks rallied for the fourth-straight session. London's FTSE 100 gained 0.44% to 4365.38, France's CAC 40 advanced 1.11% to 3206.36 and Germany's DAX rose 0.79% to 4967.23.

Asian markets closed with a mixed picture overnight as Japan's Nikkei 225 climbed 0.81% to 9344.16 and Hong Kong's Hang Seng rallied 0.57% to 18361.87 but China's Shanghai Composite fell 0.15% to 3183.74.

Great Expectations: Earnings Hopes Lift Stocks

Market Winners & Losers: Gannett, Yum Brands

The markets engaged in another big rally as the major indices rode the Intel earnings wave. The Dow closed up 3.1%, the S&P gained 3%, and the Nasdaq added 3.5% to end Wednesday’s trading session.

Here are Wednesday’s winners and losers:

Winners

Gannett Co. Inc. (GCI)
The nation’s largest publisher jumped 28.9% on a better-than-expected second-quarter profit. GCI shares closed at $4.50, a gain of $1.01 on the day.

Capital One Financial Corp. (COF)
News that credit delinquency rates were down in June sent COF shares up11.8%. The stock gained $2.73 to settle at $25.84.

American Express Co. (AXP)
American Express was another credit-card giant to cheer the falling delinquency rate, with shares gaining 11.3% Wednesday to settle at $27.22 – a gain of $2.76 on the day.

Genworth Financial Inc. (GNW)
The financial-security firm declared a dividend on Wednesday and shares gained 11%. The stock ended the day up 61 cents at $6.16.

Advanced Micro Devices Inc. (AMD)
The semiconductor rode the Intel wave, gaining 8.7% as tech spending looks to have stabilized. AMD finished the session at $3.86, a gain of 31 cents on the day.

Losers

Yum! Brands Inc. (YUM)
While profit rose in second quarter, news of continued cost-cutting dropped the restaurant chain titan 5.5% on Wednesday. YUM closed at $34.04, a loss of $1.99 on the day.

Abbott Laboratories (ABT)
The pharmaceutical company fell 2.6% on Wednesday after earnings were hampered by restructuring charges. ABT last traded at $45.28, a loss of $1.21.

Total System Services Inc. (TSS)
News that the electronic processing payment company was put on Goldman Sachs’s conviction sell list by dropped shares 1.8%. TSS ended down 23 cents, with shares settling at $12.80.

DaVita Inc. (DVA)
The dialysis-equipment provider fell 1.2% on Wednesday. DVA traded down 58 cents to $49.14.

Darden Restaurants Inc. (DRI)
The Red Lobster and Olive Garden owner fell 1.1% to end Wednesday’s session. DRI last traded at $33.32, a loss of 37 cents on the day.

Market Winners & Losers: AIG, CIT

Mittwoch, 15. Juli 2009

Al Lewis: A Minibar That Doesn't Bite

I opened the minibar at the Wequassett Inn Resort and Golf Club in Chatham, Cape Cod, Mass., with a sense of wonder.

A Heineken for $1.50? A Captain Morgan's rum or a Johnnie Walker Red whiskey for $2? A Tanqueray Ten gin for $3?

I have seen Budweiser in other hotel minibars for as much as $8 a can. I have seen sodas and candy bars selling for $5 or more.

Yet here, a Coke, a bottle of water, a tube of Pringles potato chips, and a Snickers bar listed for 75 cents apiece. Even the chocolate chip cookies -- an indispensable part of any late-night binge -- went for only $2.50.

Wequassett is a luxurious retreat on a tranquil bay where finely appointed rooms average $650 a night during peak season. Why was it not bending its guests over the minibar like so many other fine establishments?

"It's extortion," Mark Novota, 47, managing partner of the 120-room resort, replied. "It's gouging."

But hotel guests expect to be extorted at the minibar. Isn't that the industry standard?

"We see it as an amenity," Novota said. "We don't see it as a profit center."

Anybody who can afford $650 a night can afford to take a soaking over a bag of pretzels. And if they need more alcohol after the bars have closed, they probably have it coming.

This is why there hasn't been a Congressional investigation on minibar price-fixing, even though it's been a blatant abuse for decades, sometimes adding hundreds of dollars to credit card bills and employee expense reports.
Novota, however, is taking a stand: "People are willing to pay money, but they're not willing to be taken advantage of."

As an extensive traveler, he has been on both ends of the minibar, once paying $12 for a jar of jelly beans.
"You make a deal with a devil. You come home at eleven at night. And you say, 'Geez I have a craving for this and it's twelve bucks. It should be $1, but what the heck.'

"It's not even a splurge because it doesn't feel like you're getting anything," he said. "You feel taken advantage of ..."
Novota doesn't want this feeling to be part of the overall guest experience.

The resort owner grew up in Chicago, the son of a printer. Years ago, when he first took his humble parents to a fancy hotel, they marveled at the minibar.

"I remember them saying how nice of the hotel to give away all those products," he laughed. "I was footing the bill, but I didn't have the heart to tell my mom, 'They didn't give them to you.'"

Novota also recalls reveling all night at a California hotel, fueled by a pillowcase full of minibar marvels that one of his impulsive friends dragged out to a patio.

"You don't want to be that guy," Novota advises. "When everyone wants to party after the bars close, make sure they are not near your room."

Minibars are so expensive, most sober guests don't use them. Often they remove the pricey items and replace them with goods from a nearby grocery. That's why some hotels have gotten rid of minbars altogether.

In Arizona, for instance, as part of a $50 million renovation, the 492-room Hyatt Regency Scottsdale Resort and Spa at Gainey Ranch, replaced minibars with refrigerators.

Even convention-goers with corporate expense accounts are cutting back on minibars in the middle of a recession, Novota said.

"Luxury is a bad word right now. It's not in good taste to be excessive."

Novota has been at Wequassett for 22 years, yet it wasn't until three years ago that he came upon his pricing epiphany.

He frequently hears from guests. One family told of their struggles, always having to disappoint their children with warnings to stay away from the minibar.

"It's like a toy with goodies in," Novota said. "And it's a dangerous situation, especially when it's five bucks for M&Ms. ...

But not anymore: "What was once this evil domino in the room has become a useful thing."

(Al's Emporium, written by Dow Jones Newswires columnist Al Lewis, offers commentary and analysis on a wide range of business subjects through an unconventional perspective. The column is published each Tuesday and Thursday at 9 a.m. ET. Contact Al at al.lewis@dowjones.com or tellittoal.com)

Ex-GM CEO Wagoner Retires With Reduced Benefits

DETROIT--Former General Motors Corp (GM) Chairman and Chief Executive Rick Wagoner, ousted in March by the Obama administration, will voluntarily retire on August 1 with sharply reduced benefits, the company said on Tuesday.

The value of Wagoner's retirement package is about 60 percent lower than it would have been at the end of last year, before the largest U.S. automaker fell into a government-funded bankruptcy and its assets were sold to a new GM, federal regulatory filings show.

The former top GM executive reached a retirement agreement with the old GM, now renamed Motors Liquidation Co, on July 8 and will retire officially from the new GM taking benefit cuts consistent with other retirees, the company said in a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

Over the first five years of retirement, Wagoner will be paid almost $8.6 million, down from the nearly $23 million he was entitled to receive at the end of last year.

Based on 32 years service to GM, Wagoner is entitled to an annual $74,030 under the salaried retirement program and five installments of about $1.64 million under the executive retirement plan.

Wagoner had been entitled to five payments of more than $4.5 million each as of the end of 2008 under GM's executive plan and $68,900 per year under the salaried program, according to the last GM annual report.

Wagoner will continue to receive personal liability insurance until January 1. He also will receive an existing life insurance policy or its cash value, currently nearly $2.6 million.

Market Winners & Losers: AIG, CIT

Dienstag, 14. Juli 2009

FOXBusiness.com's Week in Review: July 6-10, 2009

Monday

The GM-dominated news week started off with the company gaining approval to sell its most viable assets to a new company, creatively referred to as “New GM,” which is backed by the government. The auto maker continued considering bidders, naming Chinese Automotive Industry Holding Co. as a “formidable buyer” for its Opel unit.

Meanwhile, the Justice Department is reportedly taking a close look at large telecom companies, like AT&T (T) and Verizon (VZ), to see if they’re abusing their market power. Wireless companies have been under fire for setting up exclusive agreements with phone makers to sell certain models, like Apple’s (AAPL) iPhone. Some say this hurts smaller rivals who are unable to obtain such deals.

Oil, which has recently been on the rise, fell 4% Monday to $64 a barrel due to doubts over a recovery in the global economy. The price hit a five-week low of $63.40 at one point during the day.


How to Get Out of a Car Lease
Judge Approves GM's Asset Sale

CA Budget Crisis' Impact on Cities

Torre: Players Were Entitled to Privacy
Nationwide Average
$2.57 a gallonTuesday

President Obama was in Moscow, Russia Tuesday, urging Russians to cut out corruption. He spoke about the possible passage of a second stimulus package here in the U.S. as well: “I don't take anything off the table when unemployment is close to 10% and a lot of Americans are hurting out there.”

The Commodity Futures Trading Commission, which regulates the futures markets, is considering tighter controls for trading of commodities and will be holding public hearings on the topic to get input from consumers and businesses.

Second Economic Stimulus Dept.: There’s been a lot of chatter about a potential second economic stimulus, as some say the first didn’t work and others say it wasn’t enough. The House Majority Leader, Steny Hoyer (D-Md.), said leaders should consider it as an option as job losses are still high, though he said it’s too soon to know whether the first $787 billion stimulus pushed by the Obama Administration is helping.

Meanwhile, the lawyer for accused fraudster Robert Allen Stanford requested that funds be released to pay for Stanford’s defense or that the charges against him be dismissed.


Little Support for Second Stimulus

Paying for Stanford's Legal Defense

Kobe Bryant on Michael Jackson

Former MTV VJ on Jackson’s Legacy
Wednesday

Toxic Asset Dept.: The Treasury named nine firms that will manage the Private-Public Investment Program, or PPIP, for those nasty, toxic assets that were involved in the mortgage meltdown. The list includes BlackRock, Invesco, Wellington Management, Oaktree Capital, TCW Group and a joint venture between Angelo, Gordon & Co. and GE Capital Real Estate. Part of the TARP program, PPIP will combine up to $100 billion from TARP money along with money from these private investors to buy toxic assets from banks.

Meanwhile, Bloomberg News reported that the SEC is probing Apple’s public disclosures of the health of its CEO Steve Jobs, who recently came back to work after taking a leave of absence for some time. The commission is looking at whether the company mislead investors when, in a matter of just nine days, it said the CEO’s condition went from “relatively simple” to “more complex.”

And Google (GOOG) threw its hat into the operating system ring, announcing it’s working on an open source OS that will initially be targeted toward netbooks. It will be called Chrome, like the search engine company's Web browser. Whether it will be a serious competitor to Microsoft’s (MSFT) Windows remains to be seen until the software is released next year.


Google Preps to Take on Microsoft

Solis: Recovery to Take a While

Solis: I Applaud Big Business

Manage Your Money for Free With MintThursday

With the creation of the Troubled Asset Relief Program and other federal rescue programs, the power of the Federal Reserve has grown substantially, prompting some lawmakers to question the expansion of the bank’s authority. Now a proposal from Congressman Ron Paul has been introduced that would redirect some of that power to the legislative branch and it’s gained the support of a majority in the House of Representatives. This comes amid public anger over the massive amount of cash the Fed has put toward stabilizing the country’s financial system.

Meanwhile, beneficiary of several federal bailouts American International Group (AIG) has resumed talks to sell its American Life Insurance Co. to MetLife (MET), another insurer. According to the Financial Times , which reported this, the sale could bring in over $15 billion to AIG.

Congressman Barney Frank (D-Mass.), chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, introduced a bill Wednesday to create a consumer financial regulator. The Obama Administration had proposed something similar recently, but the efforts are opposed by the financial services industry, which would be overseen by the regulator. The idea is to protect consumers from misleading credit card agreements and mortgages and the agency that would be created would have the ability to charge providers of financial services in order to fund itself.


Concerns Over Twitter's Business Model

Social Security Gone Wild

$150B in Health Care Cuts

Murdoch on State of Media, Economy
Friday

GM exited Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on Friday morning, emerging as a slimmer, government-owned auto maker. The process was similar to what Chrysler went through recently during its deal with Fiat. The company is known officially as General Motors Co.

Geithner was back in front of Congress again Friday, calling for congress to regulate all over-the-counter derivatives and that they should be traded on an exchange like the New York Stock Exchange. This is to lessen the risk these products pose to the economy in the future.


How 'New' is the New GM?

Government Motors, No More?

GM CEO: We Build Where We Sell

CEO: May Not Need All Gov't Money

  

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Market Winners & Losers: AIG, CIT

Market Winners &amp; Losers: AIG, CIT

The markets closed out the week mixed, with the Dow losing 0.5%, the S&P 500 losing 0.4% and the Nasdaq gaining 0.2% on Friday. The continued drop in crude oil prices and the unexpectedly negative consumer sentiment numbers kept the markets mostly in the red during Friday’s session.

Here are some of Friday’s winners and losers.

Winners

American International Group (AIG)
AIG shares, which have been in freefall since late June, were up 23.8% Friday. Reports that AIG had restructured agreements that reduced the debt owed to the New York Federal Reserve reversed pre-market losses after the company asked for government approval to pay out $235M in retention bonuses. The stock gained $2.26 on the day to close at $11.74.

Huntington Bancshares Inc. (HBAN)
Shares continued their two-day rally Friday, gaining 5.5%. This follows Thursday’s gains on analyst comments that because of the depressed share price, Huntington Bancshares can make up significant ground when there is high volume in the sector. Shares were up 20 cents, closing at $3.87.

Stanley Works (SWK)
Shares were up after analysts at Deutsche Bank upgraded the stock to “Hold” from “Sell”, citing Stanley Works’ slim discount to the rest of the sector and on the anticipation of positive earnings in fiscal 2010. The stock gained 4.9%, or $1.56, to close at 33.67.

Perkinelmer Corp. (PKI)
Analysts at Deutsche Bank upgraded Perkinelmer’s stock to “Hold” from “Sell”, saying that the stock’s risk/reward is more balanced as the weakness in industrial and capital spending is already factored into the stock. Shares gained 4.8%, or 76 cents, to close at $16.73.

QLogic Corp. (QLGC)
Analysts at Canaccord Adams upgraded telecommunications-equipment company QLogic to “Hold” from “Sell”, citing upside from recent weakness in the stock and the potential for renewed interest in a merger and acquisition bid. Shares were up almost 5%, gaining 62 cents to close at $13.11.

Losers

CIT Group Inc. (CIT)
Shares of this specialty-finance company took another hit Friday after it was reported that the FDIC is currently unwilling to guarantee their debt due to CIT’s worsening credit quality. CIT also clarified that their application to partake in Temporary Liquidity Guarantee Program while not denied, is still awaiting approval. The stock shed 17.7%, losing 33 cents to close at $1.53.

Genworth Financial Inc. (GNW)
After rebounding slightly on Thursday, shares of Genworth Financial were down again Friday as the negative sentiment on the insurance sector in advance of upcoming earnings continued to push the stock lower. Shares were down nearly 5% losing 28 cents to close at $5.35.

Vulcan materials Co. (VMC)
Shares of this building-materials company traded lower Friday after the company announced a quarterly dividend of 25 cents. This is 24 cents lower than the dividend paid in the previous quarter. Shares were down 4.9% losing $2.09 to close at $40.60.

Tesoro Corporation (TSO)
Shares of petroleum refiner Tesoro have been under pressure recently as inventories have risen on weakening demand and the costs of storage impacts refiner’s profit margins. Shares lost almost 4% Friday, trading down 45 cents to close at $10.89.

Citigroup Inc. (C)
With much of the banking industry under pressure in anticipation of upcoming quarterly earnings releases and in the wake of recent senior management shakeups at Citigroup, it was reported that Ian Hart, the co-head of European M&A has left the firm to take a position with competitor Morgan Stanley (MS). Citigroup shares were down 3.7%, losing 10 cents to close at $2.59.

Great Expectations: Earnings Hopes Lift Stocks

Montag, 13. Juli 2009

FOXBusiness.com's Start-Up Summer: InterShelter

About InterShelter

What has the strength of a building, the portability of a tent, and the potential to revolutionize the business of emergency relief? According to fourth-generation Alaskan Don Kubley, the InterShelter is it.

Kubley’s innovative igloo-like structure, which can be assembled by two people in less than four hours and disassembled in 20 minutes, can withstand hurricane-force winds, sub-zero temperatures and extreme heat. The InterShelter can be configured to comfortably house as many as six people and promises to serve as an efficient, cost-effective alternative to the trailers typically deployed by emergency response teams in the wake of a disaster. The price of the dome ranges from $7,000 to $12,500, depending on its features.

But the appeal of the InterShelter stretches beyond its use as temporary housing. Kubley sees uses for his dome as a retail space, a professional office and even a public restroom.

For Kubley, the possibilities are endless.

“There’s a million uses,” he said.

Factoids

Prices range from $7,000 to $12,500, depending on size and featuresThe InterShelter can withstand hurricane-force winds, sub-zero temperatures and temperatures of over 120°FLife expectancy of the InterShelter: 40 yearsInterShelter recentlyobtained all the rights, moldsand trademarks tomove into mass production andlarge-scale commercial launch

Great Expectations: Earnings Hopes Lift Stocks

Wall Street's earnings jitters quickly transformed into earnings enthusiasm on Monday as the Dow enjoyed its best one-day rally in six weeks after famously-bearish analyst Meredith Whitney turned bullish on banking titan Goldman Sachs.

Today's Markets

The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 185.16 points, or 2.27%, to 8331.68, the Standard & Poor's 500 added 21.92 points, or 2.49%, to 901.05 and the Nasdaq Composite picked up 37.18 points, or 2.12%, to 1793.21. The consumer-friendly FOX 50 gained 16.13 points, or 2.47%, to 668.22.

Goldman Sachs (GS) led the triple-digit rally and a 6.4% surge from the financial sector after the bank was upgraded to "buy" from influential analyst Whitney, who predicted Goldman will beat the Street when it reports results Tuesday morning.

“What’s good for Goldman is good for the market huh? It used to be what’s good for General Motors is good for America but you can throw that out the window,” said Marc Pado, U.S. market strategist at Cantor Fitzgerald. “The simple fact that Meredith Whitney turned positive on something financial is a really good sign."

The rally, which was the Dow's strongest since June 1, stood in stark contrast to the pessimism that sent the markets last week to their first four-week slide since March. In fact, Monday's gains allowed the Dow to recover all of its losses from last week. Up until Monday, the bullishness that lifted stocks from their 12-year lows this winter had vanished amid concerns about the timing and strength of an economic recovery.

“While the rally was based on the hope that the second quarter was better, now comes the reality,” Dan Greenhaus, equity analyst at Miller Tabak, told FOX Business. He said for the rally to restart, companies must provide evidence that conditions are improving, not just stabilizing.

All 30 components of the Dow closed in the green, led by financial giants Bank of America (BAC), General Electric (GE) and JPMorgan Chase (JPM). On the other hand, Hewlett-Packard (HPQ) and McDonald's (MCD) lagged behind.

Earnings Hopes Fuel Rally

Underscoring the wave of earnings optimism lifting stocks, all 36 S&P 500 companies scheduled to report results later his week closed higher, including Citigroup (C), Intel (INTC) and Google (GOOG).

“It’s not just the earnings but it’s the guidance going forward. Everyone wants to know where we’re going to be and how these companies are going to survive the next three months. That’s very, very important,” NYSE trader Jonathan Corpina of Meridian Equity Partners told FOX Business

But Goldman Sachs garnered the most attention as the former investment bank is expected to report stellar results Tuesday amid soaring trading profits. Expectations for Goldman are high as 14 industry analysts have raised their estimates on the bank and its shares have gained 68% year-to-date and 5% on Monday.

Shares of Goldman and other financials like Huntington Bancshares (HBAN) and Wells Fargo (WFC) rallied around bullish comments from Whitney, who predicted Goldman will beat the Street and upgraded the bank to “buy” from “neutral,” citing a “tsunami of debt issuance" and decreased competition.

While Goldman may have had a great quarter, the fate of the commercial lender CIT Group (CIT) is hanging in the balance. CIT, which received $2.3 billion in TARP money last year, is scrambling to avoid a bankruptcy filing that could lead to a temporary cash crunch for already-struggling small business owners. The Treasury and Federal Reserve have been supportive of extending a debt guarantee program to CIT but the FDIC is “very reluctant,” Reuters reported.

Energy stocks Sunoco (SUN) and XTO Energy (XTO) added to the rally as the sector advanced 1% after crude oil closed well off its worst levels. Still, crude failed to bounce back from its worst weekly selloff since late January, closing down 20 cents a barrel, or 0.33%, to $59.69.

Corporate Movers

UBS (UBS) saw its shares jump after the Swiss bank and the U.S. asked a judge for a delay in a tax trial to allow for more talks on a potential settlement. The two sides are reportedly close to a deal that would allow the Swiss bank to disclose some data without breaching Swiss privacy laws.

Microsoft (MSFT) unveiled plans to release a Web-version of its Office software during the first half of 2010. The move appears aimed at rival Google (GOOG), which announced plans last week for a free operating system that would compete with Microsoft’s Windows.

Bank of America (BAC) is balking at paying billions of dollars of fees for the backstop it received from the U.S. when the bank acquired Merrill Lynch, Bloomberg News reported. The U.S. says BofA owes $4 billion for the backstop on $118 billion of Merrill Lynch assets it received even though the bank said it never signed the rescue agreement and never used the funding, the news agency reported.

McGraw-Hill (MHP) is seeking buyers for Businessweek magazine, The Wall Street Journal reported. The publisher reportedly hired investment bank Evercore Partners to shop the magazine.

GoldmanSachs (GS) told FOX Business it has "no material exposure to CIT," citing its normal business practice to "hold collateral or put hedges in place." CIT has a $3 billion credit facility through Goldman.

Fastenal (FAST) posted a worse-than-expected quarterly profit of 29 cents per share. The nuts and bolts distributor also disclosed a 21% decline in revenue.

Global Markets

European stocks closed higher for the second time in the last three sessions. London’s FTSE 100 jumped 1.82% to 4202.13, France's CAC 40 rose 2.31% to 3052.08 and Germany's DAX climbed 3.19% to 4722.34.

Asia was broadly lower overnight. Japan's Nikkei 225 dropped 2.55% to 9050.33, Hong Kong's Hang Seng fell 2.56% to 17254.63 and China's Shanghai Composite tumbled 1.07% to 3080.56.

Sonntag, 12. Juli 2009

Market Winners & Losers: AIG, CIT

The markets closed out the week mixed, with the Dow losing 0.5%, the S&P 500 losing 0.4% and the Nasdaq gaining 0.2% on Friday. The continued drop in crude oil prices and the unexpectedly negative consumer sentiment numbers kept the markets mostly in the red during Friday’s session.

Here are some of Friday’s winners and losers.

Winners

American International Group (AIG)
AIG shares, which have been in freefall since late June, were up 23.8% Friday. Reports that AIG had restructured agreements that reduced the debt owed to the New York Federal Reserve reversed pre-market losses after the company asked for government approval to pay out $235M in retention bonuses. The stock gained $2.26 on the day to close at $11.74.

Huntington Bancshares Inc. (HBAN)
Shares continued their two-day rally Friday, gaining 5.5%. This follows Thursday’s gains on analyst comments that because of the depressed share price, Huntington Bancshares can make up significant ground when there is high volume in the sector. Shares were up 20 cents, closing at $3.87.

Stanley Works (SWK)
Shares were up after analysts at Deutsche Bank upgraded the stock to “Hold” from “Sell”, citing Stanley Works’ slim discount to the rest of the sector and on the anticipation of positive earnings in fiscal 2010. The stock gained 4.9%, or $1.56, to close at 33.67.

Perkinelmer Corp. (PKI)
Analysts at Deutsche Bank upgraded Perkinelmer’s stock to “Hold” from “Sell”, saying that the stock’s risk/reward is more balanced as the weakness in industrial and capital spending is already factored into the stock. Shares gained 4.8%, or 76 cents, to close at $16.73.

QLogic Corp. (QLGC)
Analysts at Canaccord Adams upgraded telecommunications-equipment company QLogic to “Hold” from “Sell”, citing upside from recent weakness in the stock and the potential for renewed interest in a merger and acquisition bid. Shares were up almost 5%, gaining 62 cents to close at $13.11.

Losers

CIT Group Inc. (CIT)
Shares of this specialty-finance company took another hit Friday after it was reported that the FDIC is currently unwilling to guarantee their debt due to CIT’s worsening credit quality. CIT also clarified that their application to partake in Temporary Liquidity Guarantee Program while not denied, is still awaiting approval. The stock shed 17.7%, losing 33 cents to close at $1.53.

Genworth Financial Inc. (GNW)
After rebounding slightly on Thursday, shares of Genworth Financial were down again Friday as the negative sentiment on the insurance sector in advance of upcoming earnings continued to push the stock lower. Shares were down nearly 5% losing 28 cents to close at $5.35.

Vulcan materials Co. (VMC)
Shares of this building-materials company traded lower Friday after the company announced a quarterly dividend of 25 cents. This is 24 cents lower than the dividend paid in the previous quarter. Shares were down 4.9% losing $2.09 to close at $40.60.

Tesoro Corporation (TSO)
Shares of petroleum refiner Tesoro have been under pressure recently as inventories have risen on weakening demand and the costs of storage impacts refiner’s profit margins. Shares lost almost 4% Friday, trading down 45 cents to close at $10.89.

Citigroup Inc. (C)
With much of the banking industry under pressure in anticipation of upcoming quarterly earnings releases and in the wake of recent senior management shakeups at Citigroup, it was reported that Ian Hart, the co-head of European M&A has left the firm to take a position with competitor Morgan Stanley (MS). Citigroup shares were down 3.7%, losing 10 cents to close at $2.59.

FOXBusiness.com's Week in Review: July 6-10, 2009

Monday

The GM-dominated news week started off with the company gaining approval to sell its most viable assets to a new company, creatively referred to as “New GM,” which is backed by the government. The auto maker continued considering bidders, naming Chinese Automotive Industry Holding Co. as a “formidable buyer” for its Opel unit.

Meanwhile, the Justice Department is reportedly taking a close look at large telecom companies, like AT&T (T) and Verizon (VZ), to see if they’re abusing their market power. Wireless companies have been under fire for setting up exclusive agreements with phone makers to sell certain models, like Apple’s (AAPL) iPhone. Some say this hurts smaller rivals who are unable to obtain such deals.

Oil, which has recently been on the rise, fell 4% Monday to $64 a barrel due to doubts over a recovery in the global economy. The price hit a five-week low of $63.40 at one point during the day.


How to Get Out of a Car Lease
Judge Approves GM's Asset Sale

CA Budget Crisis' Impact on Cities

Torre: Players Were Entitled to Privacy
Nationwide Average
$2.57 a gallonTuesday

President Obama was in Moscow, Russia Tuesday, urging Russians to cut out corruption. He spoke about the possible passage of a second stimulus package here in the U.S. as well: “I don't take anything off the table when unemployment is close to 10% and a lot of Americans are hurting out there.”

The Commodity Futures Trading Commission, which regulates the futures markets, is considering tighter controls for trading of commodities and will be holding public hearings on the topic to get input from consumers and businesses.

Second Economic Stimulus Dept.: There’s been a lot of chatter about a potential second economic stimulus, as some say the first didn’t work and others say it wasn’t enough. The House Majority Leader, Steny Hoyer (D-Md.), said leaders should consider it as an option as job losses are still high, though he said it’s too soon to know whether the first $787 billion stimulus pushed by the Obama Administration is helping.

Meanwhile, the lawyer for accused fraudster Robert Allen Stanford requested that funds be released to pay for Stanford’s defense or that the charges against him be dismissed.


Little Support for Second Stimulus

Paying for Stanford's Legal Defense

Kobe Bryant on Michael Jackson

Former MTV VJ on Jackson’s Legacy
Wednesday

Toxic Asset Dept.: The Treasury named nine firms that will manage the Private-Public Investment Program, or PPIP, for those nasty, toxic assets that were involved in the mortgage meltdown. The list includes BlackRock, Invesco, Wellington Management, Oaktree Capital, TCW Group and a joint venture between Angelo, Gordon & Co. and GE Capital Real Estate. Part of the TARP program, PPIP will combine up to $100 billion from TARP money along with money from these private investors to buy toxic assets from banks.

Meanwhile, Bloomberg News reported that the SEC is probing Apple’s public disclosures of the health of its CEO Steve Jobs, who recently came back to work after taking a leave of absence for some time. The commission is looking at whether the company mislead investors when, in a matter of just nine days, it said the CEO’s condition went from “relatively simple” to “more complex.”

And Google (GOOG) threw its hat into the operating system ring, announcing it’s working on an open source OS that will initially be targeted toward netbooks. It will be called Chrome, like the search engine company's Web browser. Whether it will be a serious competitor to Microsoft’s (MSFT) Windows remains to be seen until the software is released next year.


Google Preps to Take on Microsoft

Solis: Recovery to Take a While

Solis: I Applaud Big Business

Manage Your Money for Free With MintThursday

With the creation of the Troubled Asset Relief Program and other federal rescue programs, the power of the Federal Reserve has grown substantially, prompting some lawmakers to question the expansion of the bank’s authority. Now a proposal from Congressman Ron Paul has been introduced that would redirect some of that power to the legislative branch and it’s gained the support of a majority in the House of Representatives. This comes amid public anger over the massive amount of cash the Fed has put toward stabilizing the country’s financial system.

Meanwhile, beneficiary of several federal bailouts American International Group (AIG) has resumed talks to sell its American Life Insurance Co. to MetLife (MET), another insurer. According to the Financial Times , which reported this, the sale could bring in over $15 billion to AIG.

Congressman Barney Frank (D-Mass.), chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, introduced a bill Wednesday to create a consumer financial regulator. The Obama Administration had proposed something similar recently, but the efforts are opposed by the financial services industry, which would be overseen by the regulator. The idea is to protect consumers from misleading credit card agreements and mortgages and the agency that would be created would have the ability to charge providers of financial services in order to fund itself.


Concerns Over Twitter's Business Model

Social Security Gone Wild

$150B in Health Care Cuts

Murdoch on State of Media, Economy
Friday

GM exited Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on Friday morning, emerging as a slimmer, government-owned auto maker. The process was similar to what Chrysler went through recently during its deal with Fiat. The company is known officially as General Motors Co.

Geithner was back in front of Congress again Friday, calling for congress to regulate all over-the-counter derivatives and that they should be traded on an exchange like the New York Stock Exchange. This is to lessen the risk these products pose to the economy in the future.


How 'New' is the New GM?

Government Motors, No More?

GM CEO: We Build Where We Sell

CEO: May Not Need All Gov't Money

  

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Mini Climb for Stocks; First Gains in a Week

All three major indexes ended in the green on Thursday for the first time in more than week as the wave of selling that has slammed Wall Street appears to have lost some momentum.

Today's Markets

The Dow Jones Industrial Average climbed 4.76 points, or 0.06%, to 8183.17, the Standard & Poor's 500 added 3.12 points, or 0.35%, to 882.68 and the Nasdaq Composite picked up 5.38 point, or 0.31%, to 1752.55. The consumer-friendly FOX 50 rose 1.07 points, or 0.16%, to 655.11.

The mostly flat trading session on Wall Street comes amid a bearish stretch for the markets that has erased more than 300 points from the Dow in just a week. But with a pair of late-day climbs the last two days, the bulls have at least stemmed the bleeding.

“It appears the sellers have run out of ammunition. But that doesn’t mean they can’t run out to the woodshed and find some,” NSYE trader Jason Weisberg of Seaport Securities told FOX Business.

The markets were shoved in one direction or the other throughout the trading day amid a series of opposing storylines.

On the one hand, the government said initial jobless claims tumbled to their lowest level since January, the U.S. completed another successful bond auction and Alcoa (AA) started earnings season off with a beat. On the other hand, retailers posted more disappointing sales results and crude oil, viewed as a barometer for the economy, managed just a slim rebound from a six-day slide.

“We’re very lackluster right now. Volume is still low but the volatility isn’t there,” said Jonathan Corpina, senior managing partner at Meridian Equity Partners. “There are some players sitting on the sideline waiting for this market to move in one particular direction. I think we’re going to continue to stay like this until” earnings season picks up next week.

Underscoring the lack of volatility, the Dow moved just 83 points between its high and low on Thursday, the fourth-smallest trading range of the year.

More than half of the Dow's 30 components closed higher, led by JPMorgan Chase (JPM) and General Electric (GE). On the downside, drug makers Pfizer (PFE) and Merck (MRK) were two of the biggest percentage losers.

The Nasdaq Composite enjoyed stronger gains than the broader markets as tech stocks like Google (GOOG) and BlackBerry maker Research in Motion (RIMM) rose sharply.

Wall Street was led higher Thursday by energy stocks like Cabot Oil (COG) and Pioneer Natural Resources (PXD), which surged higher as crude oil's longest slump since Christmas Eve came to an end. A day after settling at its lowest level since May 19, crude closed higher by 27 cents per barrel, or 0.45%, to $60.41.

Financial stocks also bounced back from Wednesday's selloff as Goldman Sachs (GS) was upgraded to "buy" by Bank of America-Merrill Lynch, which predicted the investment bank could beat the Street.

Earnings jitters were eased somewhat by Alcoa, which started earnings season by posting its third-straight quarterly loss but one that was narrower than expected. The results helped spark a rally in metals and mining stocks like Freeport-McMoRan (FCX) and AK Steel (AKS).

On the economic front, the Labor Department said initial jobless claims unexpectedly plunged last week by 52,000 to 565,000 -- the lowest level since January. However, some traders were skeptical of the data as the week of the Fourth of July is typically volatile for claims and the government said continuing claims surged by 159,000 to 6.9 million -- a new all-time record.

The markets received a mini bounce after the Treasury Department announced mixed results of an $11 billion auction of 30-year bonds. The sale received average demand but yields came in higher than expected. In any case, the auction capped off a successful week of bond auctions that could further ease Wall Street’s fears of higher interest rates.

Meanwhile, a slew of retailers reported same-store sales results for June that missed Wall Street’s already-low expectations, including Gap (GPS), the Limited (LTD) and Buckle (BKE). On the other hand, department stores Macy’s (M) and Nordstrom (JWN) beat estimates and J.C. Penney (JCP) boosted its second-quarter sales and earnings view. Disappointment regarding the retail sales reports was offset by Target (TGT), which said it sees meeting or beating consensus earnings estimates this quarter despite a 6.2% slide in June same-store sales.

Corporate Movers

General Motors expects to close on the sale of its “good” assets to New GM sometime before 9 a.m. EDT Friday, FOX Business has learned, putting the auto maker on pace to emerge from bankruptcy quicker than anticipated. FBN has also learned that retiring Vice Chairman Bob Lutz is returning to GM in a new capacity.

Citigroup (C) announced a management shuffle, with John Gerspach being named the bailed-out bank’s new chief financial officer, replacing Ned Kelly, who will become vice chairman. At the same time, former Merrill Lynch exec Eugene McQuade is taking over as CEO of Citibank and Gary Crittenden, chairman of Citi Holdings, resigned.

American International Group (AIG) likely has no equity value due to more potential CDS losses and a firesale of its businesses, Citigroup analysts said while slashing their price target on the bailed-out insurer by 61% to $14. The analyst call comes as The Wall Street Journal reported AIG has revived talks with rival MetLife (MET) over unloading all or part of American Life Insurance Co., or Alico, its prized foreign life insurance unit.

EMC (EMC) beat out rival NetApp (NTAP) in the bidding war for storage technology company Data Domain (DDUP) with a $2.4 billion offer. The war ended Wednesday when NetApp withdrew its earlier $1.9 billion offer and paid a $57 million breakup fee.

Amazon.com (AMZN) slashed the price of its standard Kindle electronic reader by 17% to $299 amid a bidding war with Sony (SNE) and smaller rivals.

Costco (COST) said June same-store sales fell by an in-line 6% from a year ago as revenue from big-ticket items continues to be pressured.

3Com (COMS) beat the Street by swinging to a fourth-quarter adjusted-profit of 10 cents per share. The company posted an in-line decrease in revenue of 8.2%.

Data Dump

The markets had little reaction to the latest report on business inventories, which showed wholesalers cut supplies by 0.8% in May, slightly less than economists expected. The report, which measures excess supply, showed distributors are still cutting back on inventories to counter slumping demand.

Global Markets

European markets were up across the board as London's FTSE 100 rose 0.45% to 4158.66, France's CAC 40 gained 0.54% to 3025.90 and Germany's DAX advanced 1.26% to 4630.07.

Asian markets ended mixed overnight as Japan's Nikkei 225 fell 1.38% to 9291.06, Hong Kong's Hang Seng climbed 0.39% to 17790.59 and China's Shanghai Composite rallied 1.37% to 3123.04.

Murdoch on Attitudes in Sun Valley

News Corp. (NWSA) Chairman Rupert Murdoch said on Thursday that the mood at the Allen & Co. media conference was quite bearish, but that attendees were still looking for ways to generate money from their online content.

"There has not been a lot of politics talk, but I’m shocked at the business mood, which is talking about either we are at the bottom of the recession or we are going lower. But it is going to take years and years -- like five years at least -- before we see any real growth coming out of this," Murdoch told FOX Business Network. News Corp. is FBN’s parent company.

This year, the summit, which is held in Sun Valley, Idaho, is focusing on technology and how to generate money from the digital world.

"We have the answer, and we are doing it well at The Wall Street Journal," Murdoch said. "You’ve got the WSJ.com, and you pay for that, and there are nearly one and a quarter million people who are doing that, and we get a lot of advertising with it."

Murdoch noted that the Journal, with its finance and investment content, has a big and specialized business and thus has been able to get subscribers to pay to view content. Charging money for content on the Web is still relatively rare.

"It’s true what the people say, the distribution of the news gets cheaper every day because of new technology…but you still have to have something to move it, and the content," he said. "The news itself can’t come free."

Meanwhile, Murdoch observed that people are still showing support for President Obama, though he warned that attitudes toward the Administration could become more negative if the public sees a further increase in unemployment.

With the Administration using government as the agent of change, Murdoch thinks allowing Congress to control spending is “crazy and leads to tremendous waste.” He said it is more important for the President to introduce his policy and enforce a plan, which could result in more support and better effects.

Murdoch declined to comment on a report by the U.K. newspaper the Guardian that a News Corp. subsidiary paid around $1.6 million to three people who, the Guardian claims, had their cell phones hacked into by a newspaper owned by that subsidiary.

Dienstag, 7. Juli 2009

Market Winners & Losers: Constellation Brands, AIG

The first day of Wall Street’s third quarter brought gains to the major indices as the week looks to a holiday-shortened end. The Dow gained 0.7%, the S&P added 0.4% and the Nasdaq closed up 0.6%.

Here are Wednesday’s winners and losers:

Winners

Constellation Brands Inc. (STZ)
The drink manufacturer bucked saw its shares rise 7.3% on a better-than-expected quarterly earnings report. STZ last traded at $13.61, a gain of 93 cents on the day.

XL Capital Ltd. (XL)
The insurer added 7% on Wednesday, closing at $12.26 – a gain of 80 cents on the day.

Ball Corp (BLL)
News that the packing manufacturer is going to buy Anhesuer-Busch InBev’s canning operations gave the stock a 6% boost today. BLL closed up $2.69 at $47.85.

Janus Capital Group Inc. (JNS)
Positive words from Credit Suisse on the company’s outlook pushed shares up 5.7%. JNS ended the trading session at $12.05, a gain of 65 cents.

Akamai Technologies Inc. (AKAM)
Akamai shares gained 5.5%, or $1.06, to end Wednesday at $20.24.

Losers

American International Group Inc. (AIG)
A reverse stock-split and an erroneous delisting posting by the NYSE did not please investors as the insurer fell 22.1% on Wednesday. AIG closed down $5.12 at $18.08.

Varian Medical Systems Inc. (VAR)
Shares of the cancer technology manufacturer fell 6.2% on Wednesday. VAR ended the session with a $2.18 loss, settling at $32.96.

MetroPCS Communications Inc. (PCS)
Analysts warned that competition for the wireless communications provider would increase. Shares reflected the news, closing down 5.1%, or 68 cents, to $12.63.

CB Richard Ellis Group Inc. (CBG)
News of trouble in its Russian real estate interests cost the stock 4.6% on Wednesday. CBG last traded at $8.93, a loss of 43 cents.

Sprint Nextel Corp. (S)
The phone company started the quarter with a dud as shares lost 4.2%, or 20 cents, and closed at $4.61.

NYSE Admits AIG Delisting Goof-Up

Oops.

The New York Stock Exchange said late Wednesday that it had mistakenly posted a notice that it planned to suspend and delist shares of American International Group (AIG), the troubled insurance company that was the subject of a $180 billion government bailout.

The NYSE said it posted the notice on its Web site, but that the information was incorrect. The Big Board said it removed the information as soon as it noticed it was there.

AIG, based in New York, began its first day of trading Wednesday after a 1-for-20 reverse stock split that catapulted the face value of its shares from just over a dollar to more than $23 a share. But the shares closed off 22%. It is unclear when the erroneous delisting notice was posted and what role it had in AIG’s selloff.

The government stepped in with two separate government bailouts last year after AIG found itself on the wrong end of billions of dollars of real-estate derivatives transactions. As a result, the government now owns roughly 80% in AIG, which has been trying to sell assets to pay back its bailout loans.

Montag, 6. Juli 2009

NYSE Traders Forced Into Rare Extra Inning

The New York Stock Exchange extended trading by 15 minutes Thursday, in an extraordinary move prompted by what the exchange said were “system irregularities.”

The NYSE had connectivity issues that prevented some orders from being completed at the traditional 4 p.m. Eastern time close. As a result, traders were allowed to manually execute orders until 4:15 p.m.

Unlike other stock markets, the NYSE still uses specialists, or actual traders who hold mini-auctions that help set the price of a stock. While electronic trading now makes up the bulk of trading at the Big Board, specialists still handle some of the order flow on the exchange floor.

Trading past the official close is rare, but in October 2008, amid the heavy volatility brought on by the near-collapse of the U.S. financial system, trading in individual stocks was extended so specialists could fill orders.

Upbeat Opening Act to Wall Street’s 3Q

Wall Street kicked off the third quarter on a positive note Wednesday as stocks advanced even though the latest economic gauges raised more questions about the timing and strength of a possible second-half recovery than they answered.

Today’s Markets

The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 57.06 points, or 0.68%, to 8504.06, the Standard & Poor's 500 added 4.01 points, or 0.44%, to 923.33 and the Nasdaq Composite picked up 10.68 points, or 0.58%, to 1845.72. The consumer-friendly FOX 50 advanced 4.54 points, or 0.67%, to 684.01.

While the markets closed comfortably in the green, they ended well off their highs, drifting lower throughout the afternoon. Some traders scratched their heads over Wednesday's gains as the new reports were hardly all positive, revealing private employers cut another 473,000 jobs last month as the manufacturing sector recovered by less than expected and home sales grew at a glacial pace.

“I’m kind of surprised at the market's strength today. The [employment] number certainly didn’t give any more positive spin to the economic outlook,” said Michael James, senior equity trader at Wedbush Morgan Securities.

Joe Saluzzi, co-head of trading at Themis Trading, echoed that sentiment, saying: “That market has a mind of its own. The numbers weren’t great. There wasn’t anything exciting to them."

The Dow was led higher Wednesday by defensive stocks like Kraft (KFT) and Coca-Cola (KO). Only a few blue-chip stocks lost ground, led by financial companies Bank of America (BAC) and American Express (AXP).

Even though the S&P 500 capped off its best quarter since 1998 on Tuesday, the markets have largely traded sideways for the past two months as the bulls and bears battle over whether the impressive surge from the March lows is for real. While the bulls are just happy stocks have given back little of those gains, the bears see an opening.

“Sideways is the new up? I don’t know if I buy that,” said Saluzzi. “It was an impressive rally but I thought it was built on sticks. For you to get the next step up, you need to see growth and positive news.”

Mixed Economic Signals

Instead of growth and positive news, the markets received a cloudy picture on the state of the U.S. economy on Wednesday from a quartet of economic reports.

The Institute for Supply Management’s manufacturing index, which is thought to be the second-most important monthly report, climbed to 44.8 last month. That was up from 42.8 in May but below the Street’s view of 45. Still, the report marked the sixth-straight monthly increase -- the longest such streak since the aftermath of the 2001 recession -- and the highest reading since August 2008.

Home builders like Centex (CTX) and Lennar (LEN) closed mixed after the National Association of Realtors said its pending home sales index climbed 0.1% in June, slightly better than estimates. The NAR report marked the fourth-straight monthly increase in sales activity -- the longest winning stretch since 2004.

At the same time, the Commerce Department said construction spending tumbled by 0.9% in May, the fifth decrease of the last six months.

The markets shrugged off the ADP private employment report, which revealed the U.S. shed 473,000 private jobs in June, well above the 393,000 jobs economists expected to have been cut. While the number was worse than expected, the pace of job losses have continued to slow month-to-month since the beginning of the year.

The ADP data could set the bar lower for Thursday’s more-closely watched Labor Department report, which is expected to show the U.S. unemployment rate climbed to a hefty 9.6%.

Crude oil took another wild ride as the commodity gave back early gains after a new report showed a larger-than-expected jump in gasoline stockpiles. Despite a sharply weaker dollar, crude closed down 58 cents per barrel, or 0.83%, to $69.31.

Meanwhile, global auto makers disclosed their latest sales declines in a series of reports. Ford (F), which has emerged as the strongest U.S. auto maker, reported an 11% drop in sales from a year ago, the best results for any car company in more than a year. On the other hand, Chrysler said its sales tumbled 42% and General Motors suffered a 33.6% sales drop-off.

Corporate Movers

American International Group (AIG) saw its shares dive a day after the bailed-out insurer unveiled plans for a 1-for-20 stock split. Thanks to the maneuver, the onetime penny-stock is now trading at $20 per share. AIG also voted in a new slate of government-backed directors.

General Motors needs to have its “363” sale approved by the bankruptcy court by July 10, an Auto Task Force advisor testified Wednesday. If the sale is delayed past that date, the U.S. said it will cut off its debtor-in-possessor funding for the auto maker, pushing it into liquidation.

Chrysler Group’s cash burn slowed after the auto maker emerged from bankruptcy, CEO Sergio Marchionne told Bloomberg News. Marchionne, who also leads Italian auto maker Fiat, told the news agency the company isn’t looking for another partner in Europe or Asia even though it lost its bid to acquire GM's Opel business.

General Mills (GIS) beat the Street with an adjusted quarterly profit of 86 cents per share. The maker of Cheerios also boosted its full-year guidance above estimates.

Citigroup (C) raised rates on up to 15 million U.S. credit card accounts ahead of new regulations that would prevent such rate hikes, the Financial Times reported. The bailed-out New York bank has reportedly boosted rates on 13 million to 15 million cards it co-brands with retailers.

CardioNet (BEAT) lost more than one-third of its market value and fell to 52-week lows after the medical technology company slashed its 2009 outlook. CardioNet also withdrew its guidance for 2010 and 2011 amid disappointing reimbursement rates and volume growth.

Oshkosh (OSK) surged more than 25% a day after the company beat out three others by winning a $1.1 billion contract with the Pentagon to build more than 2,000 armored trucks to be used in Afghanistan.

Constellation Brands (STZ) topped estimate with an adjusted-profit of 33 cents per share even as sales tumbled 15%. The wine and spirits company also reaffirmed its full-year guidance.

Starwood Hotels & Resorts (HOT) suffered from an analyst downgrade from Barclays Capital, which predicted the entire lodging sector’s recovery will “significantly lag” an economic rebound. The firm also cut Marriott (MAR) and Choice Hotels (CHH) to “underweight” from “equal weight.”

Ball Corp. (BLL) rose sharply after the company unveiled a deal to buy part of Anheuser-Busch InBev’s packaging business for $577 million.

Global Markets

London's FTSE 100 soared 2.15% to 4340.71, France's CAC 40 gained 2.44% to 3217 and Germany's DAX advanced 2..07% to 4905.44.

Asian markets ended mixed overnight as Japan's Nikkei 225 fell 0.19% to 9939.93 and Hong Kong's Hang Seng slipped 0.81% to 18378.73 but China's Shanghai Composite rose 1.65% to 3008.15.