Showing posts with label WMT news. Show all posts
Showing posts with label WMT news. Show all posts

Views +1: Closing Bell (AAPL, WMT, WFM, MS, BAC, INTC, WMB, HGSI, ABT, OXGN, PWAV, AEM) Read more: 24/7 Wall St. Closing Bell (AAPL, WMT, WFM, MS, BAC, INTC, WMB, HGSI, ABT, OXGN, PWAV, AEM)


Stocks opened down this morning following the earnings report Apple Inc. (NASDAQ: AAPL) after markets closed yesterday. Moody’s downgrade of Spain’s sovereign debt also weighed on the opening.  The Consumer Price Index for urban consumers rose by 0.3%, and just 0.1% excluding energy and food costs. Housing starts rose by an unexpected 15% as condos and apartment construction was prompted by more demand for rental units to push markets to a mid-morning gain, but by noon share prices had given a lot of that back on continuing uncertainty about what’s really happening in Europe.  The Federal Reserve Beige Book was released at 2 p.m. ET, and its uninspiring reports sent markets sharply lower, from about 25 points up on the Dow to more than 70 points below yesterday’s close.
The unofficial closing bells put the DJIA down nearly 72 points to 11,504.70, the NASDAQ fell more than 53 points (2.01%) to2,604.04, and the S&P 500 fell 1.26% or more than 15 points to 1,209.89.
Today’s top analyst upgrade and downgrade calls were numerous and included Wal-Mart Stores Inc. (NYSE: WMT) and Whole Foods Markets Inc. (NASDAQ: WFM), and about a dozen other companies.
Morgan Stanley (NYSE: MS) reported better than expected earnings for the quarter, following  yesterday’s positive report from Bank of America Corp. (NYSE: BAC).  Morgan Stanley got a big lift from an accounting gain that lowered the value of its debt by $3.4 billion, thus boosting the bank’s revenue to $9.9 billion. Even without the gain, MS posted EPS of $0.02, There has been a turnaround from the indicated loss in Bank of America Corporation (NYSE: BAC) after its earnings showed that book value managed to actually grow and the stock was up almost 10% at $6.63 late in the session.
As far as the other big earnings report reactions today (prices within 20 minutes of the closing bell): Apple is down more than -5.5%, at $398.78; Morgan Stanley up 0.3%, at $16.68; Intel Corp. (NASDAQ: INTC) is up about 3.5%, at $24.22; Yahoo is up 2.78%, at $15.90.
Several other standouts from today are as follows…
Williams Companies, Inc. (NYSE: WMB) rose again by another 1.7%, to $29.55, after investors are considering it a cheap merger alternative to the El Paso buyout by Kinder Morgan this week.
Human Genome Sciences, Inc. (NASDAQ: HGSI) had another big day on merger speculation up, up nearly 8%, at $13.83, and here is how it ranks with analysts other price targets for biotechs ahead of the biotech earnings floodgates.
Abbot Laboratories (NYSE: ABT) rose 1.62%, to $53.29, following the announcement of the company’s intention to split its branded drug business from its other product lines.
Oxigene, Inc. (NASDAQ: OXGN)  got a nice boost of about 12.55%, to $1.59, following good data on the survival benefits of its anti-thyroid cancer drug.
Powerwave Technologies, Inc. (NASDAQ: PWAV) warned of a revenue shortfall of more than 50% for its third quarter. The shares lost nearly -42% of their value, to fall to $0.85, after posting a new 52-week low of $0.68 earlier in the day.
Agnico-Eagle Mines Ltd. (NYSE: AEM) has suspended operations indefinitely at its mine in Val d’Or, Quebec, due to unstable ground and inflows of water. The stock has fallen by -19%, to $46.21.
Stay tuned for Thursday.  We have speeches to watch from Lockhart and Kocherlakota on the docket as well as a 30-year TIPS auction.  Here are some economic releases due in the morning and throughout the day:
  • 8:30 Unemployment Benefits Claims for last week
  • 8:30 Existing Home Sales
  • 10:00 Conference Board’s Index of Leading Economic Indicators
  • 10:30 Natural Gas Report
  • 4:30 PM Federal Reserve Balance Sheet
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Views +1: Media Digest (Oct, 17 - 2011 ) Reuters, WSJ, NYTimes, FT, Bloomberg Read more: Media Digest (10/17/2011) Reuters, WSJ, NYTimes, FT, Bloomberg


Philips Electronics may be unable to shed its TV operation and will fire 4,500. (Reuters)
Kinder Morgan (NYSE: KMI) to buy El Paso (NYSE: EP) for $21 billion and will save $250 million in the merger. (Reuters)
Olympus falls 24% after its CEO is pushed out and certain questionable payments are revealed. (Reuters)
Samsung to seek a broad ban to sales of the Apple’s (NASDAQ: AAPL) iPhone. (Reuters)
EU officials say they will have a plan in place by October 22 to handle the region’s financial crisis. (WSJ)
Anadarko Petroleum (NYSE: APC) to pay BP (NYSE: BP) $4 billion for issues related to Deepwater Horizon. (WSJ)
Walmart (NYSE: WMT) China CEO to leave as the firm faces strict regulation in the People’s Republic. (WSJ)
The UAW’s largest local approves a deal with Ford (NYSE: F). (WSJ)
U.S. postal workers will hire the former Obama car czar Ron Bloom to help them lose as few jobs as possible in a restructuring. (WSJ)
Realtor.com analysts report that the amount of attractive inventory in the home market has fallen. (WSJ)
The IMF says emerging market nations will not help Europe. (WSJ)
Hulu owners may bring in a new investor as their relationship with the premium website company weakens. (WSJ)
Eastman Kodak (NYSE: EK) licenses some of its patents to Imax (NYSE: IMAX). (WSJ)
Carl Icahn buys a large stake in Navistar International (NYSE: NAV). (WSJ)
Mercer finds that young workers are happier that older ones but also are more likely to leave their companies. (WSJ)
A permanent change in how Wall St. operates could hurt Morgan Stanley (NYSE: MS) and Goldman Sachs (NYSE: GS) earnings for a prolonged period. (WSJ)
Amazon.com (NASDAQ: AMZN) begins to sign authors and cut out publishers. (NYT)
The FCC sets a deal for wireless users to get alerts on minute overages that cost them money. (NYT)
Bids to buy EMI from Citigroup (NYSE: C) have fallen short of expectations. (NYT)
Energy bills in the EU could rise for 20 years. (FT)
The G20 give the EU one week to fix its debt crisis. (Bloomberg)
Bankers may face larger losses as government officials look to them to shoulder more of the costs of a Greek bailout. (Bloomberg)
Samsung files new suits to stop sales of the iPhone in Asia. (Bloomberg)...........