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US stocks mixed as Wall Street digests earnings, health care leads



U.S. stocks were mostly flat Thursday as Wall Street kept an eye on mixed earnings and upbeat economic data following a week of record highs for the Dow and S&P.
The Dow Jones industrial average fell slightly as Intel weighed, andCaterpillar had the most positive impact. The S&P 500 was also down fractionally, with health care and consumer discretionary leading three sectors in the green. The Nasdaq composite rose roughly two points.
The number of Americans filing for unemployment benefits fell to a three-month low last week, in a sign that the labor market is stabilizing.
"This is the first indication that job growth in July was also pretty good," said David Kelly, chief global strategist at J.P. Morgan Asset Management. "The economic narrative remains the same; the economy isn't growing fast but it's growing fast enough to cause the labor market to tighten." 
Initial claims for state unemployment benefits fell by 1,000 to a seasonally adjusted 253,000, the Labor Department said Thursday. Economists polled by Reuters expected claims to rise to 265,000. 
Claims are near a 43-year low, hit in mid-April, Reuters reported.
"The better jobs number was a fundamental catalyst when you look at what happened in the market after," said Liz Ann Sonders, chief investment strategist and senior vice president at Charles Schwab. Sonders highlighted the June nonfarm payroll number, which exceeded expectations with a headline figure of 287,000.
"This market rally had more to do with economic sentiment than anything," she said.
Equity markets extended record highs this week. The Dow Jones industrial average extended gains Wednesday for nine consecutive days for the first time since 2013. The S&P 500 closed at a new record level and the Nasdaq composite had its highest close of the year.
Earnings were mixed Thursday.
General Motors posted a record second-quarter profit Thursday, sending shares up more than 3 percent, pacing for its twelfth consecutive positive day for the first time ever.
Biogen helped boost the Nasdaq and S&P, with the stock up more than 6 percent after posting positive results.
Intel shares fell more than 3.5 after it beat analysts' expectations for earnings on Wednesday, but posted revenues came in lower than expected. Fellow chipmaker Qualcomm beat Wall Street expectations and issued a strong forward guidance, sending shares up nearly 7 percent.
Bank results continued to surprise this week, with Morgan Stanley reporting earnings of 75 cents per share versus consensus expectations of 59 cents, according to Thomson Reuters. Morgan Stanley joinedGoldman SachsCitigroupJPMorgan Chase, and Bank of America on the list of U.S. financial institutions topping second-quarter profit forecasts.
"These numbers are confirming the earning bounce back we were expecting, given flat oil prices and a flat U.S. dollar," J.P. Morgan's Kelly said. "What we're getting is confirmation that the economy is still growing steadily and earnings are rebounding."
Of the 70 S&P 500 companies reporting as of Wednesday, 67 percent beat estimates according to Thomson Reuters. Starbucks, AT&T, Capital One, Visa, Schlumberger, Boston Beer and Chipotle report after the bell.
European stocks moved lower after the European Central Bank left key interest rates unchanged. The non-move was widely expected but further policy stimulus from global central banks is thought to be coming in the months following June's Brexit vote.
ECB President Mario Draghi said at a press conference that the central bank was ready to act if necessary but officials wanted to "reassess the underlying macroeconomic conditions" and data before making a decision.
The pan-European STOXX 600 was up slightly after falling in early trade. European travel stocks went lower, led by Lufthansa, which cut its full-year profit target as bookings declined due to terrorist attacks and economic uncertainty, the company said. Shares of the airline fell 8 percent after the news. 
The German DAX was roughly 20 points higher and the U.K.'s FTSE 100 gained half a percent. France's CAC fell 0.61 percent.
Then yen hit new lows after news that Tokyo was considering a 20 trillion package of stimulus to bolster the economy. The currency later recovered 1 percent as Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda told BBC radio that there is no need for "helicopter money" to fight inflation, and the central bank already had mechanisms in place to ease further if needed.
Although the interview was published Thursday, BBC said the it was recorded in June. The yen gained 1 percent against the dollar after Kuroda's comments, trading near 106.25 yen.
The dollar was weaker against a basket of currencies after hitting four-month highs Wednesday.
The Euro hit a high of $1.1058 against the dollar before losing most of the gains in choppy trade. The euro traded near $1.10, while the British pound fell to $1.32.
"The market can handle a little strength in the dollar but not if it starts to impact other areas that cause financial conditions to tighten," said Sonders of Charlies Schwab. "We've been in this policy loop, at the heart of it is what the dollar is doing."
Oil was slightly lower, with WTI trading near $45.60 after hitting a two-month intraday low a day earlier. Brent crude futures were just below $47.
Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City.
Brendan McDermid | Reuters
Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City.
Grains traded higher amid a heat wave in the U.S. Corn futures rose a quarter of a percent and wheat was up half a percent.
Yields on U.S. sovereign bonds were higher with increased expectations of a rate hike. The U.S. 2-year note rose to yield 0.72 percent. The 10-year yield increased to 1.60 percent, while the U.S. 30-year note yielded 2.32 percent.
Gold was up slightly after hitting its lowest intraday level since June 28 a day earlier. The precious metal traded at $1,319 per ounce.
Symbol
Name
Price
Change
%Change
DJIADow Industrials18574.24
-20.79-0.11%
S&P 500S&P 500 Index2172.51
-0.51-0.02%
NASDAQNASDAQ5092.02
2.080.04%
The Dow Jones Industrial Average traded roughly 30 points lower with Intel as the biggest laggard, and Caterpillar leading the gainers.
The Dow Transports fell almost 1.5 percent at the open, pacing for the worst day since June 27. Southwest Airlines led the sector lower after reporting record quarterly profit but a miss for Wall Street estimates. Shares of the company fell nearly 10 percent in early trading.
The S&P 500 fell 40 points, with technology, energy, and health care leading the upward trending sectors. Industrials and utilities led the S&P sectors lower. 
The Nasdaq rose 4 points to roughly 5,094 after having its highest close of the year a day earlier.
The CBOE Volatility Index (VIX), widely considered the best gauge of fear in the market, traded near 11.98.
Advancers led decliners on the New York Stock Exchange, with an exchange volume of 60.19 million, and a composite volume of 188.05 million.
On tap this week:
*Planner subject to change.
Thursday:
10:00 a.m Existing Home Sales
10:00 a.m Leading Indicators
10:30 a.m. Natural Gas Inventories
4:30 p.m. Fed Balance Sheet
Earnings before the bell: Biogen, Daimler, General Motors, Roche Holdings, Travelers, Unilever, Union Pacific, Bank of NY Mellon, BB&T, Blackstone, Domino's Pizza, DR Horton, PulteGroup
Earnings after the bell: AT&T, Paypal, Schlumberger, Starbucks, Visa, Capital One, Chipotle Mexican Grill, E-Trade, Advanced Micro, Boston Beer, Pandora Media
Friday:
9:45 PMI Mfg Index Flash
1:00 p.m. Oil Rig Count
Earnings before the bell: General Electric, Honeywell, American Airlines, Moody's, Stanley Black & Decker
Original post found here:

KFC, Apple in China hit by South China Sea spat

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In this photo taken on Tuesday, July 19, 2016 and released by Guo Lu, policemen stand watch Chinese people carrying national flags hold a protest outside a KFC restaurant outlet in Baoying county in east China's Jiangsu province. In an apparent attempt to head off large-scale street demonstrations, Chinese state newspapers have criticized scattered protests against KFC restaurants and other U.S. targets sparked by an international tribunal's ruling that denied Beijing's claim to virtually the entire South China Sea. (Guo Lu via AP)
BEIJING (AP) — To the challenges facing KFC and Apple in China, add a surprise backlash from Beijing's spat with the Philippines over the South China Sea.
Nationalists are protesting at KFC outlets and calling for a boycott, spurred by government accusations that Washington encouraged Manila to oppose Beijing's claims to vast tracts of ocean.
Photos circulated online show young Chinese wearing scarves with patriotic slogans smashing Apple iPhones in protest.
State media have fanned public anger with a torrent of criticism of last week's ruling by a U.N. tribunal, which found no legal basis for Beijing's claim to most of the South China Sea.
"The Chinese public, as optimistic and positive as they are, are deeply patriotic and nationalistic, especially people who are younger," said James Roy of the research firm China Market Research Group. KFC and Apple "are just very closely associated with the United States, and you are seeing people picking the closest symbol they can think of to demonstrate against."
The protests are a reminder of the political risks for global brands in China, where they regularly become targets of nationalist sentiment, often stirred up by official media.
In 2012, sales of Japanese autos plunged when Tokyo and Beijing were in a dispute over control of uninhabited islands in the East China Sea.
The Chinese leadership has tried to tamp down this week's protests with demands in state media to leave foreign companies and their customers alone.
"This is not the right way to express patriotism," said the government's Xinhua News Agency. The China Daily newspaper called the protests "jingoism that does a disservice to the spirit of devotion to the nation."
Some KFC customers have responded by posting photos of themselves online with a bucket of chicken, axes or other weapons and signs reading, "patriotic hooligans, try harassing me and I'll take you out."
Phone calls to spokespeople for KFC in China and written messages sent through the company website weren't answered.
A man in the eastern city of Yangzhou, northwest of Shanghai, said he watched a protest Tuesday morning after seeing a note online appealing to people to take part. He said it also told protesters to boycott Japanese and Korean goods.
"A group of more than 20 people including children broke into the restaurant and shouted at customers to leave," the witness, Guo Lu, said by phone from Yangzhou. He said police arrived quickly and pushed the protesters out of the restaurant.
The timing is unusually bad for KFC, which is China's biggest restaurant chain with more than 5,000 outlets but is overhauling its struggling business after a food scandal and marketing missteps.
KFC's owner, Yum Brands Inc., is preparing to spin off its China unit, which also includes Pizza Hut restaurants, as a separate company in October in hopes of improving its performance.
KFC has long been an all-purpose target for protests about U.S. issues, especially in areas outside big cities with few other foreign symbols. In 1999, after NATO jets bombed the Chinese Embassy in Belgrade, protesters wrecked KFC restaurants.
The company and other foreign chain restaurants in China also face an upheaval as customers migrate to fast-growing local competitors they say offer more nutritious meals.
For its part, Apple has faced a series of legal hurdles this year in China, its second-biggest market.
In April, it suspended its iBooks and iTunes Movies services, reportedly due to an order by Chinese regulators.
The next month, an intellectual property tribunal ordered Apple to stop selling its iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus in Beijing after finding they look too much like a model made by a small Chinese brand. Apple was allowed to continue sales while it appeals.
Also in May, a court ruled a Chinese company is allowed to use the iPhone trademark on bags, wallets and other leather goods.
An Apple spokeswoman responded to a request for comment by pointing to CEO Tim Cook's positive comments in April about the company's future in China. Cook said Apple was "really optimistic" and planned to open five more stores in China during the current quarter for a total of 40.
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HALLIBURTON: 'The North America market has turned'

crude oil pumpjack shale
crude oil pumpjack shale
(An oil pumpjack in the Permian Basin oil field on January 20 in the oil town of Andrews, Texas.Spencer Platt/Getty) Halliburton on Wednesday reported a second-quarter loss and less revenue than it earned in the same period last year, but said it thinks the North American oil market had turned around.
The oil fields services company posted an adjusted loss per share from continuing operations of $0.14, better than analysts' median estimate for a loss of $0.19, according to Bloomberg. Revenue totaled $3.84 billion (versus $3.76 billion expected), a 35% year-over-year decline.
"We believe the North America market has turned," Halliburton CEO Dave Lesar said in the earnings statement. "We expect to see a modest uptick in rig count during the second half of the year."
Halliburton's North American revenue fell 15% year-over-year to $1.5 billion.
Lesar also said there were still challenges in the Middle East and Asia, where revenue declined 3% from the first quarter.
The company's count of oil rigs fell 15% year-on-year, below the average US decline of 23%. The company said it thought the count had reached a "landing point," as rising oil prices gave more producers confidence to bring more rigs online.
The US oil-rig count rose by 11 in the last week of June, its biggest weekly increase in six months, according to Baker Hughes. The tally's steep decline after the worst oil-price crash in decades stabilized in about mid-May.
The company noted that it paid Baker Hughes a $3.5 billion termination fee during Q2 after the scrapping of the companies' $28 billion merger. The deal faced strong opposition from regulators in the US and in Europe.
Halliburton shares were little changed in premarket trading after the earnings release. They have gained 32% this year.
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Wall Street is running out of jobs to cut — so it's cutting pay

Wall Street is running out of jobs to cut — so it's cutting pay
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Michael Nagle | Bloomberg | Getty Images. Banks earnings reflect more cuts to pay, than to headcount. It's a sign some could be hitting peak efficiency.
Wall Street's top bankers are getting their pay slashed. But at least they're keeping their jobs.
Investment banks cut pay to begin the year, when a disastrous first quarter hampered earnings . But now, even as markets and bank performance rebounds — Morgan Stanley(MS) on Wednesday morning became the latest major Wall Street firm to top analysts' estimates —they're still slashing compensation.
It's a sign that the banking and trading businesses on which Wall Street's leading banks rely for billions of dollars in revenue are hitting peak efficiency. Having already pared down headcount to get profitable last quarter, it looks like big banks are running out of jobs to cut.
Investment banking firm Morgan Stanley revealed in its earnings Wednesday that it has cut compensation 9 percent, from $4.4 billion to $4 billion, on lower revenue . But total staff only fell by only 2 percent, to 54,529.
When Goldman Sachs (GS) reported earnings Tuesday, it had a similar tale to tell. Thebank cut compensation 13 percent year-over-year, but cut only 100 total workers over the same time period (a change of less than one percent).
JPMorgan Chase (JPM) has seen headcount rise slightly overall year-over-year, and the bank just unveiled an initiative to give thousands of low-ranking staffers a pay hike.However, over the same time frame, JPMorgan saw corporate and investment bank headcount fall by 1 percent. Commercial banks have far bigger teams dedicated to retail transactions and mortgages than the investment banks do.
Experts went into the year predicting cuts to jobs and pay for traders and bankers. Investment banks have been hit hard this year, from a combination of the Brexit forcing Wall Street to consider relocating staffers, to boutique banks elbowing institutional behemoths aside to claim big M&A mandates, to regulators snuffing out big deals that would have made for multi-million dollar paydays.
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Bank of America earnings top expectations

    Andrew Harrer | Bloomberg | Getty Images. The commercial banking giant posted second-quarter earnings per     share of 36 cents, compared to 45 cents a share in the same period a year ago.

Bank of America (BAC) reported quarterly earnings and revenue that beat analysts' expectations on Monday.
The commercial banking giant posted second-quarter earnings per share of 36 cents, compared to 45 cents a share in the same period a year ago. Analysts had expected the company to report earnings of about 33 cents a share on $20.414 billion in revenue, according to a consensus estimate from Thomson Reuters.
Revenue for the quarter came in at $20.6 billion, against the comparable year-ago figure of $22.345 billion. Bank of America shares rose more than 1 percent when markets opened for trading Monday morning.
The results make Bank of America the third big U.S. financial institution that has topped second-quarter profit forecasts, following Citigroup (NYSE:C) and JPMorgan Chase (JPM)last week.
Goldman Sachs (GS) is expected to report earnings Tuesday, with Morgan Stanley (MS)earnings expected Wednesday.
"Our responsible growth strategy led to improved customer and client activity and each of our four business segments reported higher earnings than the year-ago quarter," Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan said in a statement. "We also moved closer to our longer-term performance targets."
Like virtually all U.S. banks, Bank of America has struggled in 2016, first under the weight of plunging loan values in the energy sector as oil prices struggled, and later as the markets began to expect interest rates to stay lower for longer. Bank of America stock is down nearly 20 percent so far this year.
Staffing at the bank is down more than 2.8 percent year-over-year, to more than 210,000 employees, and headcount is also down from the first quarter of the year. While the bank has closed more than 100 financial centers in the last 12 months, that pace appears to have slowed. The bank has only eight fewer financial centers at the end of the second quarter compared to the first quarter, at 4,681, which reflects a slowing in the pace of closure of branches.
Moynihan said during the second quarter that prolonged low interest rates could spur job cuts, and he appeared to acknowledge the lower-for-longer environment on the bank's conference call.
"We believe we surely can [maintain profitability without an interest rate hike]," Moynihan said. "If rates rise, we would expect [net interest income] to grow." 
After a turbulent first quarter that hampered many big Wall Street banks, Bank of America also reported better overall sales and trading figures than it did to begin 2016. Additionally, the bank's fixed income, currencies and commodities (FICC) trading division outperformed its first quarter tally. Bank of America CFO Paul Donofrio said on the firm's earnings call that the increase in FICC revenue translated to a 22 percent year-over-year increase.
There were other bright spots for the bank in its earnings report; Bank of America's delinquencies and charge-offs for its U.S. credit card business fell compared to the first quarter, according to its earnings report. Purchasing volumes for its U.S. credit card business rose, however.
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