NYSE News: NYSE 100, NYSE 250, and NYSE 400 investment news
NYSE market news from the New York Stock Exchange

Latest NYSE News:

  • Oil, solar sectors gain on record crude prices

  • Microsoft up 9.2 percent on quarterly results

  • New home sales numbers don’t help Wall Street

  • Dow loses over 130 points by midday

  • Merck profits up 62 percent in third quarter

  • Quarterly reports disappoint Wall Street

  • Wall Street lower on banking sector

  • Wall Street mixed to end session

  • Home builders decline on comments, news

  • Citigroup lower on quarterly report

  • NYSE news feed


    Recommended equities news sites

  • NYSE
  • NasDaq
  • Dow Jones
  • Finance & Money
  • Eurofirst News
  • Tokyo Market News
  • FTSE News
  •  

    September 25, 2006

    Drug retailers continue to decline

    Filed under: Administaff, Marathon Oil, Altria, CVS, Phelps Dodge, Archer Daniels Midland, Coeur dAlene, Reynolds American, Walgreen, Pride International

    The New York equities markets were mixed at midday on Monday on news from several sectors. Both the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the S&P 500 were lower, by 0.1 percent each to 11,497.13 and 1,314.15 respectively, while the Nasdaq Composite had added 0.2 percent to 2,222.94.

    Crude oil futures that fell below $60 per barrel sent the oil sector lower. Marathon Oil dropped 2.7 percent to $69.25, while Pride International, an oil services group, fell 3 percent to $25.46. Archer Daniels Midland declined 4.2 percent to $36.85 on comments from an investment commentator that ethanol would never seriously challenge oil as a fuel.

    Metals prices were also lower, sending shares in miners tumbling. Coeur d’Alene fell 2.8 percent to $4.44, while Phelps Dodge was 3.1 percent lower to $80.16.

    The tobacco sector saw losses when a federal court judge in New York let a class-action suit representing users of “light” cigarettes proceed in the courts. Reynolds American fell 2.7 percent to $60.36, while Altria dropped 4.3 percent to $78.82.

    Drug retailers continued to decline after last week’s announcement by Wal-Mart that it was starting a pilot program to sell generic prescription drugs at $4 for a thirty-day supply. CVS declined 4.7 percent to $31.48, while Walgreen’s dropped 4.8 percent to $44.63 even though it said it saw profits increase by 25 percent in it’s fiscal forth quarter.





    September 20, 2006

    Oil sector declines on falling prices

    Filed under: Administaff, Oracle, Bear Stearns, Marathon Oil, Halliburton, Morgan Stanley, Reynolds American, Masco, Legg Mason

    The New York equities markets were up Wednesday at midday as investors waited for the Federal Reserve to issue its latest decision on interest rates. The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 0.6 percent to 11,603.91, while the Nasdaq Composite was 1.4 percent higher to 2,252.74 and the S&P 500 was also up 0.6 percent to 1,325.90. The S&P was at its highest level since February 2001, while the Dow was approaching its all-time high level.

    Oil and oil-related companies were lower, however, as crude oil prices continued to decline. Halliburton was 2.7 percent lower to $28.32, while Marathon Oil dropped 3 percent to $71.26.

    The tobacco sector was also lower as Reynolds American was 3.7 percent lower to $62.12 on a downgrade from “buy” to “hold” from Citigroup, which said that product shortages were driving consumers to other brands.

    Plumber Masco declined by 2.1 percent to $26.77 after it revised its earnings guidance downward for this year based on the decrease in housing starts.

    In the banking sector, however, investment banks saw gains on the day. Morgan Stanley added 0.9 percent to $72.51 on a 59 percent increase in third-quarter earnings, a better performance than had been anticipated. The news helped Bear Stearns, which gained 3.7 percent to $140.20, while Legg Mason was 4 percent higher to $100.87.

    Oracle added 11.8 percent higher to $18.04 after it said that its fiscal first quarter profits were up by 29 percent, which its chief executive said was due to an increased market share.





    July 7, 2006

    Ebay drops as Citigroup cuts target share price

    Filed under: ConocoPhillips, Administaff, Newmont Mining, Marathon Oil, eBay, Altria, Reynolds American, PMC Sierra

    The New York equities markets were generally lower by midday on Friday as the Labor Department released new data showing that fewer jobs were created in the US in June than had been predicted. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 0.7 percent to 11,149.50, a drop of 0.1 percent on the week. The Nasdaq Composite dropped 0.4 percent to 2,146.83, a decline of 1.2 percent over the week. The S&P 500 was nearly even, having lost only 1.16 points to 1,272.92, leaving it with a gain of 0.2 percent on the week.

    The news that only 121,000 jobs had been created in the US in June was a disappointment after a gain of 200,000 had been predicted. The high expectations had been raised by Wednesday’s National Employment Report from payroll services company ADP, which said that 368,000 new jobs had been created during June. The Labor Department numbers, along with figures showing that higher than expected wage inflation during the month, made investors nervous.

    Ebay dropped 7.9 percent to $26.99, largely on a downgrade from Citigroup, which lowered its target share price on the online auctioneer by over 20 percent to $40 earlier in the week. In addition, Ebay said that it was installing new senior executives in several divisions.

    Changes in personnel also led to a decline for PMC Sierra in the semiconductors sector, as the chipmaker declined by 18.4 percent to $7.67 after it said its chief financial officer is leaving the company.

    Climbing oil prices led to advances in the oil sector. ConocoPhillips added 4.9 percent during the week to $68.74, while Marathon Oil was up 5 percent to $87.50.

    Also up on higher commodities prices was Newmont Mining, which was up 4.4 percent to $55.25.

    Tobacco companies also saw gains on the week after the Florida Supreme Court set aside a $145 billion dollar punitive damages award against the US tobacco industry. Reynolds American added 1.6 percent to $117.19, while Altria gained 5.5 percent to $77.45.





    July 6, 2006

    Costco drops 2.7 percent on slow sales in June

    Filed under: Administaff, Costco Wholesale, Altria, Target, TJX, Dollar General, Peoples Energy, WPS Resources, Peabody Energy, Arch Coal, Reynolds American

    At midday on Thursday, New York equities markets were up after new data showed that the US economy was moderating but not falling off sharply when the Institute for Supply Management’s non-manufacturing index dropped more than had been expected in June. By mid-session, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was up 0.8 percent to 11,237.15, while the Nasdaq Composite and the S&P 500 had each added 0.4 percent, to 2,160.99 and 1,275.86 respectively.

    In the retail sector, Costco declined by 2.7 percent to $55.29 on sales figures that were lower than expected in June. Elsewhere in the sector things were better, with Target up 1.4 percent to $48.94. TJX, which owns TJ Maxx and Marshall’s, added 3.5 percent to $23.00. Dollar General advanced by 4 percent to $14.39.

    The energy sector was mixed. Peoples Energy was up 8.4 percent to $38.99 on the news that it is talking to WPS Resources about a merger. The news sent WPS down 4.5 percent to $47.92. In other mergers and acquisitions news, Peabody Energy added 5 percent after it said it would buy Australian coal company Excel coal. The Peabody announcement helped rival Arch Coal to advanced 2.3 percent to $43.22.

    With the announcement that the Florida Supreme Court has upheld a lower court ruling that threw out a $145 billion damage award against the tobacco industry, tobacco stocks were up substantially. Reynolds American added 4.1 percent to $119.01, while Altria was up 6.6 percent to $78.19, its biggest one-day gain since November 2004.





    Latest Equities News:

  • Wall Street ends lower despite rate cut

  • Asia-Pacific, Europe equities see declines

  • Hang Seng adds 10.72 percent on session

  • India’s Sensex drops 1,408 points on session

  • Australian markets drop for 9th straight day

  • Taiex gains on opposition win in parliamentary elections

  • Hang Seng drops nearly 400 points

  • Most Asia-Pacific markets drop on US recession worries

  • Tokyo declines on export worries

  • Asia-Pacific equities mixed on economic concerns

  • NYSE News copyright 2005 Central Consultants