Market Brief: May 8, 2020

A daily summary of news, analysis and data shaping the market.
Market Brief
Friday, May 8, 2020
Looking ahead. The stock market continues to rally in the face of grim economic news. On Friday, data showed the U.S. unemployment rate soared to 14.7% in April as employers cut 20.5 million jobs during the month. Recent surveys of manufacturing, services, and business investment activity all showed tumbling figures. But U.S. stock indexes all closed the week with solid gains. As always, investors are looking to the future, and the economic data reflects conditions as they were last week, last month, or last quarter. Those focused on the recovery believe that the worst is already behind us and are moving to price in better data ahead. And trillions of dollars of monetary and fiscal policy stimulus have provided powerful tailwinds to both that recovery and risk assets, such as stocks. Regardless of the jobs data, the Dow Jones Industrial Average closed up 455 points, or
1.9%, on Friday. The S&P 500 rose 1.7% and the Nasdaq Composite gained 1.6%. The small-cap Russell 2000 index, more sensitive to upturns and plunges in the economy, added 3.5%.
CHANGE
DJIA 24,331.32 455.43
S&P 500 2,929.80 48.61
NASDAQ 9,121.32 141.66
US 10-Year Note 0.69 0.05
Dollar Index 99.77 -0.12
Crude Oil 24.69 1.14
Gold 1,708.50 -17.30
Global Dow 2,637.22 47.44
Powered by Dow Jones Research, FactSet, Eurostat, SIX Financial Information.
The U.S. Lost 20.5 Million Jobs in April
The coronavirus pandemic claimed 20.5 million jobs in April as companies across America were forced to close and consumers stayed home to cap the disease’s spread.

The Labor Department said Friday that the job losses in April followed a downwardly revised loss of 870,000 in March. So far, about one in five workers are unemployed.

Investors knew this would be one of the worst jobs reports in history. The decline in nonfarm payrolls for April is about three times as bad as the jobs lost over the entire Great Recession, with the depth of the losses not seen since the Great Depression. But the headline number was about in line with the 21 million job losses economists predicted, and the unemployment rate—at least on the surface—looks not as bad as feared.

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Japanese Regulator Grants Special Approval for Gilead’s Covid-19 Drug
Japan’s drug regulator issued a special approval on Thursday, allowing the Gilead Sciences antiviral remdesivir to be used to treat Covid-19 patients in the country.

The approval came less than a week after the U.S. Food and Drug Administration issued its own emergency use authorization for remdesivir in Covid-19 patients. Japan acted extraordinarily quickly: Gilead submitted its application with the regulator only on Monday.

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Royal Caribbean Expects Full-Year Loss, Considers Additional Financing Sources
Royal Caribbean Cruises said Friday that it expects to incur a net loss in the first quarter and full year, byproducts of the coronavirus pandemic’s freeze of cruising activity.

As of April 30, Royal Caribbean had about $2.3 billion of cash and cash equivalents, the company said Friday in an update of its financial situation. It added that it’s considering seeking additional financing sources, but it did not elaborate.

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Shanghai Disneyland Tickets Sold Out in Minutes. Disney Stock Is Rising.
Walt Disney stock jumped Friday morning after the company announced that Disney Springs—an outdoor shopping, dining, and entertainment complex outside of Disney World Resort in Orlando, Fla.—will begin a phased reopening starting on May 20. The rest of the Disney World Resort, including theme parks and resort hotels, will remain closed, the company said.

The announcement came as the company’s theme park in China—Shanghai Disneyland—is busy preparing for a reopening on May 11 after a four-month shutdown. Tickets for the reopening—with limited capacity under government regulations—sold out in minutes after bookings started Friday 8 a.m. local time, a sign that Chinese consumers are ready to pull out their wallets for the entertainment giant as the nation recovers from the coronavirus pandemic.

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Marijuana Grower Cronos Crimped by Virus
Canadian pot producer Cronos Group distinguished itself early by getting the backing of big tobacco name Altria Group, but Cronos has never sold much cannabis. That didn’t change in the March quarter. Friday morning, Cronos reported all of $8 million in revenue for the quarter and growing operating losses. At least it has Altria’s money to count on.

Cronos stock was down 27% for the year at Thursday’s closing price of $5.59. In Friday afternoon trading, shares were down more than 4%. With its balance sheet still boasting $1.3 billion in cash from Altria, investors still award Toronto-based Cronos a $2 billion market capitalization.

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Macy’s Delayed Its Earnings Report, Yet the Stock Is Rising
Macy’s is delaying its first-quarter earnings results. But that didn’t stop the stock from rising on Friday.

Normally, its quarterly report would need to be filed by June 11 under the Securities and Exchange Commission’s rules. But late Thursday it announced a modified schedule because of business disruptions, store closures, and employee furloughs brought about by the coronavirus pandemic. Macy’s now plans to release its full results and hold an investor call on July 1, the company said.

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Hydroxychloroquine Doesn’t Lower Risk of Death for Coronavirus Patients, Study Finds
An observational study published Thursday in the New England Journal of Medicine tracked more than 1,000 Covid-19 patients at a large New York City medical center, and found the generic malaria drug hydroxychloroquine didn’t lower the risk of patients dying or needing to be intubated.

The study wasn’t randomized, and had several limitations associated with observational studies. But it is the latest in a series of studies that have served to tamp down early excitement over the drug, which was touted heavily by some commentators and by public officials, including President Donald Trump.

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Bitcoin Rallies Above $10,000. Don’t Think of It as a Hedge.
Bitcoin rose above $10,000 late on Thursday and traded near that level on Friday, at about $9,930, as enthusiasm has grown for the digital money. The price has more than doubled from less than $4,000 in March.

As always with Bitcoin, there are several possible explanations for the surge, of varying plausibility. But a look at the price chart makes it seem that Bitcoin’s move is closely correlated with swings in most other risky assets, which have rebounded aggressively in the past month after falling in March.

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UnitedHealth Is Giving Back $1.5B to Help Customers
Health insurance giant UnitedHealth Group said it is giving back more than $1.5 billion to customers, in the form of credits and waived copays, among others. The move is due to an unexpected consequence of the Covid-19 pandemic: falling medical costs.

UnitedHealth’s move, which it said aims to support its customers during the pandemic, will put pressure on other insurers to do the same.

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With Sports Shut Down, Cord-Cutting Picks Up Steam. R.I.P., Cable TV?
Cord-cutting—people dropping their cable and satellite TV subscriptions—predates the onset of Covid-19. But the pandemic is exaggerating the trend, creating deeper issuers for programming that relies on those services for distribution.

For one thing, it has long been the conventional wisdom that one of the few reasons people have hung on to their pay-TV subscriptions is access to live sports. With almost all professional and college sporting events shut down, that argument carries no weight. Meanwhile, with U.S. unemployment at the highest rate since the Great Depression, and so many options for free or low-cost subscription streaming video, Americans are fleeing pay TV at a record rate.

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Copyright ©
2020 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Not for redistribution.
The information provided here is for general informational purposes only and should not be considered an individualized recommendation or personalized investment advice. The investment strategies mentioned here may not be suitable for everyone. Each investor needs to review an investment strategy for his or her own particular situation before making any investment decision.

All expressions of opinion are subject to change without notice in reaction to shifting market or economic conditions.

Past performance is no guarantee of future results and the opinions presented cannot be viewed as an indicator of future performance.

Market Brief: May 7, 2020

A daily summary of news, analysis and data shaping the market.
Market Brief
Thursday, May 7, 2020
Nasdaq in the Green. U.S. stocks closed higher Thursday, crossing some important milestones, even as job losses from the coronavirus pandemic topped 33 million. The Dow Jones Industrial Average added about 211 points, or 0.9%, to close near 23,876, while the S&P 500 closed higher by about 33 points or 1.2%, at about 2881. The Nasdaq Composite closed at about 8980, up 125 points or 1.4%, and erasing its pandemic-induced losses. The technology-heavy index is now in positive territory—up 0.8%—in 2020. The Nasdaq had crossed the psychologically important 9,000 threshold earlier, but stocks gave back some of their early gains after concerns about demand for oil weighed on crude prices.
CHANGE
DJIA 23,875.89 211.25
S&P 500 2,881.19 32.77
NASDAQ 8,979.66 125.27
US 10-Year Note 0.64 -0.06
Dollar Index 99.87 -0.22
Crude Oil 23.46 -0.53
Gold 1,726.40 37.90
Global Dow 2,594.61 21.44
Powered by Dow Jones Research, FactSet, Eurostat, SIX Financial Information.
3.2 Million More Americans Claimed Jobless Benefits
The coronavirus pandemic claimed an additional 3.2 million jobs last week, the fewest since lockdowns began in earnest but a number that remains historically high as layoffs continue across the economy.

Thursday’s figures bring the total number of first-time claims for unemployment insurance to more than 33.5 million since mid-March. The Labor Department last week reported an increase of 3.8 million initial claims on a seasonally adjusted basis.

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Neiman Marcus’s Bankruptcy Just Pushed Retailer Defaults to an All-Time High
Neiman Marcus Group has filed for bankruptcy in a restructuring that will transfer majority ownership of the retailer to its creditors. Its filing has pushed the default rate for retailers to an all-time high, as the coronavirus pandemic further destabilizes the sector.

The Dallas-based department store has secured $675 million of “debtor-in-possession financing,” or loans meant to fund its operations as it goes through the bankruptcy process. Creditors have also committed $750 million in exit funding, a sum that includes a full refinancing of the debtor-in-possession financing.

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Uber Loses Nearly $3 Billion in 3 Months
Uber Technologies Inc. announced a quarterly loss of nearly $3 billion Thursday afternoon, including a write-down of more than $2 billion related to its investments in Asian partners, as the ride-hailing industry suffers from the Covid-19 pandemic.

Uber reported a first-quarter loss of $2.94 billion, or $1.70 a share, compared with a loss of $1.01 billion in the year-ago period. Revenue swelled 14% to $3.54 billion from $3.1 billion in the year-ago period. Analysts surveyed by FactSet had estimated a loss of 84 cents a share on revenue of $3.55 billion on average.

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Lyft’s Results Are Stronger Than Expected
Lyft late Wednesday reported stronger-than-feared first quarter financial results.

The ride-sharing company posted revenues of $955.7 million, up 23%, and ahead of the Wall Street analyst consensus at $898 million. In what will likely come as a pleasant surprise to the Street, Lyft posted an adjusted Ebitda, or earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization, loss of $85.2 million, narrower than the company’s original projected loss of $140 million to $145 million.

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Norwegian Cruise Line CEO: We Have Enough Cash for More Than 18 Months of No Revenue
Having raised about $2.4 billion of new capital this week, Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings has enough liquidity to last more than 18 months even with zero revenue, CEO Frank Del Rio told Barron’s.

Thanks to the capital raise, he said, Norwegian now has about $3.5 billion of liquidity. “The future is certainly brighter for Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings and the industry than it was just a few days ago,” he added.

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Liberty Global and Telefónica Plan $38 Billion Telecom Merger in U.K.
The U.S.’s Liberty Global and Spain’s Telefónica on Thursday agreed to merge their British operations Virgin Media and O2 in a £31.4 billion ($38.45 billion) deal that will dramatically reshape the United Kingdom’s telecom market and intensify the battle with BT Group.

The new 50-50 joint venture will have £11 billion in combined revenue and 46 million customer accounts across mobile, broadband, and pay-TV platforms. Mike Fries, CEO of Liberty Global and José María Álvarez-Pallete Lpez, chairman and CEO of Telefónica, said the two companies plan to invest £10 billion in the U.K. over the next five years.

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Moderna Speeds Up Timeline for Covid-19 Vaccine, Gets All-Clear for Phase 2 Trial
Shares of the biotech firm Moderna jumped after the company said that the Food and Drug Administration had approved its application to run a Phase 2 study of its experimental Covid-19 vaccine, and that the trial would begin “shortly.”

In an investor call Thursday morning, the company laid out an updated timeline for development of the Covid-19 vaccine, which is faster in key ways than the timeline that had been previously described. The company says it hopes for approval of the drug next year.

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JetBlue Posts a Loss and Revenue Falls Short
JetBlue Airways is the latest airline to report results that missed analysts’ estimates for the first quarter, but its shares traded higher on signs that its finances have stabilized with aggressive cost-cutting and cash conservation efforts.

The company should have enough liquidity to last 10 months—signs that the industry is stabilizing, albeit at sharply reduced capacity. Shares closed Thursday up about 2% after logging bigger gains during the session.

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Grubhub Stock Slumps as It Vows to Spend Heavily to Support Restaurants
Grubhub late Wednesday reported first-quarter results that were better than Wall Street estimates. Revenue was $363 million, up 12% year over year, and ahead of analysts’ consensus estimate of $357.2 million. The company roughly broke even on an earnings-per-share basis, while the Street had expected a loss of four cents a share.

But the food delivery company also said it planned to spend almost all of its potential profits in the second quarter “to drive more sales for restaurants and, to a lesser extent, policies and products to keep our restaurants, drivers, and diners safe.” Shares slumped about 12% Thursday in the wake of the earnings report.

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Teva’s CEO on Why the Generic Drugmaker Is Confident Despite Covid-19
Drugmakers have fallen into two categories this earnings season: those that maintained the revenue projections they set out early this year, and those that have cut those forecasts in light of the pandemic.

Teva Pharmaceutical Industries, the large manufacturer of generic drugs, joined the former group Thursday morning, sticking to its previously issued guidance of between $16.6 billion and $17 billion in revenue this year. Investors rewarded the company, sending Teva shares up nearly 10%. In an interview with Barron’s, CEO Kåre Schultz said Teva expects the Covid-19 pandemic to be a wash for its business.

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Dow Jones Contact Us
| Privacy Policy
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4300 Route 1 North, South Brunswick, NJ 08852
Copyright ©
2020 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Not for redistribution.
The information provided here is for general informational purposes only and should not be considered an individualized recommendation or personalized investment advice. The investment strategies mentioned here may not be suitable for everyone. Each investor needs to review an investment strategy for his or her own particular situation before making any investment decision.

All expressions of opinion are subject to change without notice in reaction to shifting market or economic conditions.

Past performance is no guarantee of future results and the opinions presented cannot be viewed as an indicator of future performance.

Market Brief: May 5, 2020

A daily summary of news, analysis and data shaping the market.
Market Brief
Tuesday, May 5, 2020
Eyeing Reopening. Stocks finished higher on Tuesday but gave up a chunk of their session gains, as investors monitored the easing of social restrictions put in place to stem the spread of the coronavirus. The S&P 500 rose 0.9% to 2868. The Dow Jones Industrial Average climbed 133 points, or 0.6%, to 23,883. The Nasdaq Composite gained 1.1% to 8809. Equities have managed to shrug off the economic devastation across the U.S. as the reopening of some states and counties offers a glimpse of the recovery.
CHANGE
DJIA 23,883.09 133.33
S&P 500 2,868.44 25.70
NASDAQ 8,809.12 98.41
US 10-Year Note 0.65 0.01
Dollar Index 99.76 0.28
Crude Oil 24.59 4.20
Gold 1,715.60 2.30
Global Dow 2,594.43 23.69
Powered by Dow Jones Research, FactSet, Eurostat, SIX Financial Information.
Oil Prices Are Surging Again
Oil prices continued their furious rally on Tuesday, with West Texas Intermediate crude futures rising another 18% to $23.97. Brent crude was up 11% to $30.23. West Texas crude has risen 86% in just the past five trading days. Brent crude is working on a six-day rally that has sent prices up 48%.

Crude is up for two reasons. One is that investors now expect demand to return for major products like gasoline and diesel as countries start loosening lockdown orders imposed to stop the spread of the coronavirus. The other is that oil companies have gotten more serious about reducing supply. U.S. oil production has already declined by almost 1 million barrels a day since it peaked in March, according to Rystad Energy. Earnings releases from U.S. oil companies show they’re prepared to make dramatic cuts.

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U.S. Service Sector Skidded Into Recession Last Month
Activity across the U.S. service sector, two-thirds of the nation’s economy, fell at the fastest pace on record during the first full month of lockdowns across much of America.

A set of reports on Tuesday show the sharp hit the coronavirus pandemic and efforts to curb its spread have had on everything from retail and hospitality to professional services in April. It’s just the latest data point to reflect the growing toll the crisis is having on nearly every segment of the economy.

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California Sues Uber and Lyft, Saying They Misclassified Drivers as Contractors
California sued Uber and Lyft for allegedly misclassifying their drivers as independent contractors instead of employees, a move that intensifies a battle between the ride-hailing giants and their home state.

California, which is suing the companies under authority granted by a new state law and under the California Competition Law, said the decision to classify drivers as contractors has deprived them of rights such as paid sick leave and unemployment insurance.

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Disney Earnings Fall More Than 90% as Covid-19 Wipes Out $1B in Theme-Park Sales
Walt Disney’s profit dove more than 90% in the second quarter, an example of the drastic effects on the company from the Covid-19 pandemic, which executives said cost the media giant more than $1 billion in sales just in its theme-parks division.

Disney reported fiscal second-quarter profit of $460 million, or 26 cents a share, on sales of $18.01 billion, up from $14.9 billion in the year-ago quarter, which included only a few days of results from Disney’s $71 billion acquisition of Fox assets. In that quarter, though, Disney reported profit of more than $5 billion, with a boost from the acquisition of a controlling interest in Hulu.

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Airbnb to Lay Off Nearly 25% of Workforce
Airbnb is slashing nearly one-fourth of its workforce, or 1,900 employees, as it grapples with a free-falling travel industry.

The cutbacks, first reported by The Information, were announced to employees by company CEO Brian Chesky on Tuesday afternoon. “We are collectively living through the most harrowing crisis of our lifetime, and as it began to unfold, global travel came to a standstill,” Chesky told employees in a note.

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Norwegian Cruise Line Aims to Raise $2 Billion in Fresh Capital
Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings is hoping to raise $2 billion of new capital through a combination of debt, equity, and an investment from a private-equity firm.

Norwegian, the smallest of the big three U.S. cruise operators, suspended its operations in mid-March due to the coronavirus pandemic along with its peers—Carnival and Royal Caribbean Cruises. There has been some disagreement about how much cash Norwegian is burning each month as its ships sit idle during the pandemic crisis. But several analysts estimated recently that Norwegian had six to eight months of liquidity remaining with no sailings.

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Hertz Has Reached a Deal With Lenders to Delay a Default—but Not for Long
Hertz has reached an agreement with its creditors to stave off a default on its debt and a liquidation of its rental fleet, at least temporarily.

The company said in a statement on Tuesday that lenders had agreed to waive some of the requirements in its debt contracts until May 22. Hertz failed to make a required lease payment to the subsidiary that owns its automobile fleet on April 27, and would have defaulted if it hadn’t reached a forbearance agreement with its lenders.

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United Airlines Is Planning Deep Job Cuts
United Airlines is planning steep layoffs as the airline prepares for a world of sharply reduced air travel. That may pave the way for United to return to profitability sooner. But the airline will still have to get through a brutal few months—and investors appear skeptical that the cost cuts will be sufficient.

United said Monday that it expected to cut its management staff by at least 30%, starting in October, according to a memo sent to employees. The cuts amount to about 3,450 workers. United is receiving $5 billion in payroll support under the government’s Cares Act program, which includes restrictions on compensation and layoffs. But the money doesn’t cover payrolls entirely and it will run out in September, giving United more flexibility to reduce its workforce.

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Pfizer and BioNTech Begin Giving U.S. Test Participants a Potential Covid-19 Vaccine
The drug giant Pfizer said Tuesday it had begun giving participants an experimental Covid-19 vaccine it is developing with the German biotech firm BioNTech.

The companies are working together on a messenger RNA-based vaccine, a novel approach in which BioNTech specializes. Pfizer is one of the world’s largest vaccine makers.

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WeWork Co-Founder Adam Neumann Sues SoftBank Over Abandoned Deal
WeWork co-founder Adam Neumann sued SoftBank Group on Monday in the Delaware Court of Chancery over the Japanese holding company’s decision to terminate a bid to buy up to $3 billion of stock in WeWork parent The We Company from a small group of shareholders.

Under the original terms of that deal, Neumann would have sold up to $970 million of stock to SoftBank.

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Dow Jones Contact Us
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4300 Route 1 North, South Brunswick, NJ 08852
Copyright ©
2020 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Not for redistribution.
The information provided here is for general informational purposes only and should not be considered an individualized recommendation or personalized investment advice. The investment strategies mentioned here may not be suitable for everyone. Each investor needs to review an investment strategy for his or her own particular situation before making any investment decision.

All expressions of opinion are subject to change without notice in reaction to shifting market or economic conditions.

Past performance is no guarantee of future results and the opinions presented cannot be viewed as an indicator of future performance.

Market Brief: May 4, 2020

A daily summary of news, analysis and data shaping the market.
Market Brief
Monday, May 4, 2020
Late-Session Comeback. U.S. stocks rallied in the final hours of trade to end the day in positive territory as investors looked past rising U.S.-China tensions to focus on hopes of an economic rebound from the coronavirus-induced slowdown. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 26 points, or 0.1%, to end the session around 23,750, the S&P 500 index gained 12 points, or 0.4%, to close near 2843, and the Nasdaq Composite index rallied 106 points, or 1.2%, to about 8,711. Mega-cap technology companies helped power the major indexes higher with Dow component Microsoft rising 2.5% in a rebound, after losing 2.6% Friday in a broad market selloff. Other tech gainers included Tesla, which led the Nasdaq-100 with an 8.5% gain, and Netflix, which ended the session up 3.1%. Analysts pegged earlier losses to comments from the Trump administration Sunday suggesting it could impose additional tariffs on Chinese goods in retaliation for its mishandling of the Covid-19 outbreak, and comments by Warren Buffett, who said he sold his firm’s airline stakes as a result of the virus. An airline-focused exchange-traded fund, U.S. Global Jets ETF, lost about 4.3% on the day.
CHANGE
DJIA 23,749.76 26.07
S&P 500 2,842.74 12.03
NASDAQ 8,710.71 105.77
US 10-Year Note 0.64 0.02
Dollar Index 99.54 0.46
Crude Oil 21.21 1.43
Gold 1,711.50 10.60
Global Dow 2,571.40 -35.51
Powered by Dow Jones Research, FactSet, Eurostat, SIX Financial Information.
J. Crew Is the First Major Retailer to File for Bankruptcy Because of Coronavirus
J. Crew has reached a deal with its lenders to restructure its debt, becoming the first major retailer to file for bankruptcy because of the coronavirus recession.

The privately owned retailer filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy early Monday to carry out the restructuring agreement with lenders and equity investors. J. Crew will convert about $1.65 billion of debt into equity. It has obtained $400 million of debtor-in-possession financing and committed financing to exit bankruptcy from its lenders.

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Warren Buffett Jettisons Airline Stocks
Warren Buffett has bailed on airlines, sending the stocks into another tailspin.

Buffett said Saturday that he had sold his entire stake in U.S. airline stocks through his holding company Berkshire Hathaway. Buffett held stakes of roughly 8% and 10% in the four largest U.S. carriers: American Airlines Group, Delta Air Lines, United Airlines, and Southwest Airlines.

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Boeing Is Just Too Hard to Predict for Buffett
Warren Buffett knows commercial aerospace. His Berkshire Hathaway owned—until recently—large stakes in major U.S. airlines. His company also owns a large aerospace supplier: Precision Castparts. But it doesn’t look like he’s is going to add Boeing stock to his list of holdings anytime soon.

“We shut off air travel in this country. And what that does to people’s habits, how they behave in the future, it’s just hard to evaluate. I don’t know the answer,” said Warren Buffett at Saturday’s Berkshire Hathaway annual meeting, answering a question about the downturn in commercial aerospace. “If you think about Boeing, it is one hell of a company…we hope for the best and we wish everybody the best, obviously, and we wish ourselves the best in [aerospace], but part of [our success] is out of our—certainly out of our control.”

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Factory Orders Slid 10.3% in March, Before Brunt of Stay-Home Orders
New orders for U.S. manufactured goods fell at the fastest pace on record in March, the latest report to show the scope of the damage from the coronavirus pandemic.

Factory orders tumbled a worse-than-expected $51 billion, or 10.3%, from February, the Census Department said Monday. Economists polled by Bloomberg predicted a 9.7% decline. Transportation-related orders were a big factor behind the drop—they fell 41%—as travel slowed to a trickle and supply-chain disruptions started to build midway through the month. Backing out those, overall orders fell 3.7% from a month earlier.

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Add a Trade War With China to the Covid-19 Worry List
Fresh from logging the best month in over two decades, stocks are now faced with a familiar threat: rising U.S.-China tensions on multiple fronts. Investors are trying to assess how much of the heightened rhetoric between the world’s two largest economies could lead to action.

President Donald Trump in recent days has floated the idea of tariffs, and other possible retaliatory measures have reportedly been under discussion, including lifting China’s sovereign immunity, which would allow U.S. citizens or governments to file lawsuits against Beijing seeking damages. Shortages in critical medical and other equipment have also fueled calls for the U.S. to bring supply chains back home.

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Carnival Cruise Line Lays Out Plan to Begin Limited Sailings Aug. 1
Carnival, the world’s largest cruise operator, said it plans to resume North American sailings on a limited basis starting Aug. 1 after being sidelined amid the coronavirus pandemic.

The Miami-based cruise operator, which oversees nine brands and more than 100 ships, on Monday cited in a press release eight ships that it plans to use when it reopens.

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GE Will Lay Off 25% of Its Aviation Workers
General Electric announced more job cuts in its largest and most profitable division as it takes additional actions to resize its commercial aerospace franchise for a post-Covid world. Yes, its stock is dropping—and nearing financial crisis lows.

In a letter to employees, GE Aviation head David Joyce called the situation the industry is facing unprecedented, pointing out commercial air traffic will be down 80% year over year in the second quarter. On a typical spring day, more than 2 million passengers go through TSA checkpoints at U.S. airlines. That number is now below 200,000 a day.

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What Might Gilead’s Covid-19 Drug Cost—$10 or $4,500?
What will be the cost of a course of treatment of remdesivir, the Gilead Sciences therapeutic authorized by the Food and Drug Administration on Friday to treat Covid-19? One influential research group has come up with two suggestions based on different factors: $10, and $4,500.

The debate is moot for the moment, as Gilead has said it would donate its current stock of more than 140,000 treatment courses. But it could be important in the coming months if remdesivir becomes and remains the standard of care for Covid-19 patients.

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Tyson’s Earnings Miss Estimates
Tyson Foods missed Wall Street earnings estimates for the first calendar quarter of 2020. The meat producer reported 77 cents in per-share earnings from $10.9 billion in sales for its fiscal second quarter ending in March. Analysts were looking for $1.04 from $11 billion in sales.

“During the quarter, we witnessed an unprecedented shift in demand from food service to retail, temporary plant closures, reduced team member attendance, and supply chain volatility as a result of the virus,” said CEO Noel White in the company’s news release. “While we cannot anticipate how long the challenges presented by Covid-19 will persist, we remain focused on driving long-term growth.”

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Telefónica and John Malone’s Liberty Global Are in Talks to Merge Their U.K. Operations
Spain’s Telefónica said on Monday it is in talks with U.S. tycoon John Malone’s cable group Liberty Global over a possible merger of their U.K. operations, in a deal that would create a new television and mobile company with a combined value of almost £28 billion ($35 billion).

The Spanish telecom group said discussions to combine its O2 mobile business with Liberty Global’s Virgin Media cable network were in “negotiation phase” and it couldn’t guarantee the terms of the deal or the probability of success. People close to the situation said the talks were at an advanced stage and a deal could be announced as early as Thursday, when Telefónica is due to report its first-quarter earnings.

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Dow Jones Contact Us
| Privacy Policy
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4300 Route 1 North, South Brunswick, NJ 08852
Copyright ©
2020 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Not for redistribution.
The information provided here is for general informational purposes only and should not be considered an individualized recommendation or personalized investment advice. The investment strategies mentioned here may not be suitable for everyone. Each investor needs to review an investment strategy for his or her own particular situation before making any investment decision.

All expressions of opinion are subject to change without notice in reaction to shifting market or economic conditions.

Past performance is no guarantee of future results and the opinions presented cannot be viewed as an indicator of future performance.

Market Brief: May 1, 2020

A daily summary of news, analysis and data shaping the market.
Market Brief
Friday, May 1, 2020
Down Week. U.S. stocks started the first trading day in May on a downbeat note after notching the best April for the benchmarks in years. The day’s losses wiped out weekly gains and were mostly reflective of the magnitude of the surge in the prior month and concerns about the earnings prospects for dominant technology-related firms that have been at the vanguard of a recovery for the market from a coronavirus-induced selloff that hit a low in late March. On Friday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average closed down more than 622 points, or 2.6%, at about 23,724, marking its worst day since April 21, while the S&P 500 index ended down 2.8% at around 2831 and the Nasdaq Composite Index closed down 3.2% at about 8605. For the week, the Dow declined 0.2%, the S&P 500 lost 0.2%, and the Nasdaq fell 0.3%. Shares of Amazon ended Friday’s session down by more than 7% after the
company said that it would use its profits to spend on protecting its workers during the Covid-19 pandemic, raising the question about costs for companies during the public health crisis. Separately, shares of electric-vehicle maker Tesla finished the session off by more than 10% after CEO Elon Musk tweeted that the share price of the company had gotten too high.
CHANGE
DJIA 23,723.69 -622.03
S&P 500 2,830.71 -81.72
NASDAQ 8,604.95 -284.60
US 10-Year Note 0.62 -0.02
Dollar Index 99.07 0.06
Crude Oil 19.73 0.89
Gold 1,708.30 14.10
Global Dow 2,604.17 -59.26
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Exxon Mobil Reports $610 Million First-Quarter Loss Amid Low Oil Prices
Exxon Mobil on Friday announced billions in write-downs of its assets because of low prices. The announcement came as the oil giant reported first-quarter results.

Under standard accounting, Exxon lost $610 million, or 14 cents per share in the first quarter. But excluding one-time items, the company posted earnings per share of 53 cents, ahead of Wall Street expectations for 4 cents. Revenue of $56.2 billion was a decline from last year’s $63.3 billion, but ahead of analysts’ expectations for $53.5 billion.

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Chevron Announces New Production Cuts
As it reported quarterly results Friday, energy giant Chevron announced new production cuts to handle extremely low oil prices. The company’s production actually rose on a year-over-year basis in the first quarter but is now expected to start sliding.

Chevron said it will spend $14 billion on capital expenditures this year, down from the $16 billion it said it would spend in March, and the company’s initial expectations of $20 billion. Chevron also plans to reduce its operating expenses by another $1 billion.

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Gilead Stock Has Soared. Wall Street Thinks It’s Gone Far Enough.
Wall Street has changed its tune on biotech Gilead Sciences. Three separate analysts issued downgrades of the highflying stock on Thursday night and Friday morning after the company reported earnings for the first quarter that surpassed estimates.

Shares of Gilead are up 29.3% so far this year as the S&P 500 has dropped 9.9%. The stock soared on excitement over the company’s antiviral remdesivir, which a government-run study found shortened the recovery time for Covid-19 patients, according to an announcement this week. All three of the analysts praised Gilead for its work on remdesivir. But they say the antiviral won’t lead to profits for Gilead, and that the run-up of the stock on remdesivir news has boosted the valuation too far, or at least far enough.

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AbbVie Beats Earnings Estimates as Allergan Acquisition Nears
The drug company AbbVie reported earnings for the first quarter on Friday morning that beat Wall Street estimates.

AbbVie reported adjusted diluted earnings per share of $2.42 for the quarter, beating the S&P Capital IQ Consensus estimate of $2.25. The company reported net revenue of $8.6 billion, up 10.1% from the same quarter last year. AbbVie said in its news release that it expects its acquisition of Botox maker Allergan to close this month.

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Elon Musk Said Tesla’s Stock Price Is ‘Too High.’ Investors Dumped the Stock.
Many Wall Street analysts believe in Tesla’s products but say the stock price is too high. It turns out that Tesla CEO Elon Musk agrees with them. The enigmatic chief tweeted out at 11 a.m. Eastern time Friday: “Tesla stock price is too high IMO.”

Tesla shares, already trading lower Friday morning, slumped following the tweet. Regardless of how investors feel about the stock, Musk has a point. And shares could have further to fall.

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Apple Posts Better-Than-Expected Results for the March Quarter
Apple late Thursday reported better-than-expected results for its fiscal second quarter ended March 31, but the stock traded lower on Friday.

For the quarter, Apple reported revenue of $58.3 billion, up 1% from a year ago, with profits of $2.55 a share, up 4%. The Wall Street forecast had called for revenue of $54.5 billion and profits of $2.26 a share. In February, Apple withdrew its original guidance for the March quarter, which had called for revenue of $63 billion to $67 billion.

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Clorox Is Rallying After Earnings Because Cleaning Products Are Popular in a Pandemic
Clorox stock has rallied more than 2% in premarket trading after the cleaning- and consumer-products company reported a blowout quarter.

The company reported that its quarterly sales increased by 15% from last year, above the 10% increase analysts had forecast. Its diluted quarterly earnings per share jumped 31% from last year, well above estimates for a 16% increase. Earnings per share came in at $1.89 a share on sales of $1.783 billion, beating forecasts for $1.67 a share and $1.707 billion.

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Apollo Global Management Swings to a Loss
Apollo Global Management swung to a loss in the first quarter as the coronavirus pandemic roiled markets.

Net losses for the asset management firm totaled $2.3 billion in the first quarter, with $1 billion—or $4.47 a share—of those losses attributable to Apollo’s class A shareholders. By comparison, in the first quarter of 2019, Apollo reported profits of $315.5 million, with $139.9 million—or 67 cents a share—attributable to its class A shareholders. Still, despite the significant first-quarter drop, Apollo is declaring a cash dividend of 42 cents a share.

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Honeywell Spells Out Just How Bad the Second Quarter Will Be
Honeywell on Friday said it earned $2.21 a share from $8.5 billion in sales in the first quarter. Earnings per share were significantly ahead of analysts’ estimates for $1.97, although sales missed the $8.6 billion consensus.

But looking at the current quarter, Honeywell expects sales to slide. It says sales linked to the aerospace industry, which has been hard hit by the coronavirus crisis, likely will decline 25% year over year. Energy-linked sales will be down 15%. Even building-technology sales will fall 10%.

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Boeing Is Saying No to Government Money. Here’s What It Is Doing Instead.
Commercial aerospace giant Boeing announced a huge $25 billion bond offering. It will use the liquidity to help itself and its suppliers through the Covid-19-induced aerospace crisis. Just as important, with the cash, expected to arrive in early May, Boeing says it won’t need a government bailout.

“As a result of the [bond offering] response, and pending the closure of this transaction …we do not plan to seek additional funding through the capital markets or the U.S. government options at this time,” reads the company’s news release.

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Copyright ©
2020 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Not for redistribution.
The information provided here is for general informational purposes only and should not be considered an individualized recommendation or personalized investment advice. The investment strategies mentioned here may not be suitable for everyone. Each investor needs to review an investment strategy for his or her own particular situation before making any investment decision.

All expressions of opinion are subject to change without notice in reaction to shifting market or economic conditions.

Past performance is no guarantee of future results and the opinions presented cannot be viewed as an indicator of future performance.

Market Brief: April 30, 2020

A daily summary of news, analysis and data shaping the market.
Market Brief
Thursday, April 30, 2020
April Gains. U.S. stocks fell modestly on Thursday but left their double-digit percentage gains for April intact, after a round of mixed corporate earnings and a report that the federal government was considering retaliating against China for its handling of the coronavirus. The S&P 500 fell 0.9% to about 2912. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 288 points, or 1.2%, to about 24,346, based on preliminary numbers. The Nasdaq Composite was down 0.3% to about 8890. For the month, the S&P was up about 12.7%, and the Dow rose 11.1%. Economic data pointed to the pain felt by households. Nearly 3.8 million people filed for unemployment benefits for the first time in the most recent week, the Labor Department said. Adding to the bearish market sentiment, the Washington Post later reported that the Trump administration was considering retaliatory actions against the
Chinese government for its lack of transparency about the seriousness of the outbreak.
CHANGE
DJIA 24,345.72 -288.14
S&P 500 2,912.43 -27.08
NASDAQ 8,889.55 -25.16
US 10-Year Note 0.63 0.01
Dollar Index 99.00 -0.56
Crude Oil 19.13 4.07
Gold 1,693.10 -20.30
Global Dow 2,661.77 -25.40
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Coronavirus’ Labor-Market Toll: At Least 30 Million Jobs Lost
An additional 3.8 million Americans filed for unemployment benefits last week, putting at least 30 million people out of work as the coronavirus crisis ravages the economy.

The Labor Department said Thursday that seasonally adjusted initial jobless claims fell from the previous week’s 4.4 million. That marks the lowest since the first multimillion reading for the week of March 20. Still, the tally remains historically high and suggests about 1 in 5 workers has been laid off in recent weeks. For perspective, jobless claims over the past six weeks are more than five times the worst stretch of the Great Recession.

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ECB to Banks: Take the Money and Lend
The European Central Bank kept its key official interest rate steady—at minus 0.5%—on Thursday but made sure European banks would keep lending to businesses and consumers throughout the region by improving the conditions of its main liquidity operation—and launching a new one.

Faced with a coronavirus-induced recession that ECB President Christine Lagarde said could see the eurozone’s gross domestic product shrink between 5% and 12% this year, the governing council also reiterated that it was “fully prepared” to increase the massive pandemic-related bond-buying program it announced last month.

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The Federal Reserve Is Expanding the Reach of Its Main Street Lending Program
The Federal Reserve has opened up a key lending program to larger businesses, and those with higher debt levels.

It announced a new lending facility created to buy loans made to companies with relatively high debt burdens—up to six times last year’s earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortization, or Ebitda. In the new part of its Main Street Lending Program, called the “Main Street Priority Loan Facility,” it will buy 85% of eligible loans from the banks that originate them.

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Gilead Is Still Waiting for FDA Approval to Use Remdesivir to Treat Covid-19
Twenty-four hours after Gilead Sciences announced positive results from a government study of its experimental Covid-19 drug remdesivir, data on the study are still scant, and the Food and Drug Administration has made no public moves to authorize the drug for emergency use.

Still, analysts say that an emergency-use authorization for remdesivir is likely to come soon.

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AstraZeneca Teams Up With Oxford Lab to Manufacture Covid-19 Vaccine
AstraZeneca said Thursday that it had signed a deal with Oxford University to develop, manufacture, and distribute the Covid-19 vaccine currently undergoing safety testing in the United Kingdom.

“Our hope is that, by joining forces, we can accelerate the globalization of a vaccine to combat the virus and protect people from the deadliest pandemic in a generation,” AstraZeneca CEO Pascal Soriot said in a statement.

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Amazon Says It May Lose Money While Spending on Covid-19 Response
Amazon.com topped $75 billion in sales in the first quarter as Covid-19 swept across the globe, but profit declined and the company said Thursday that it might lose money in the current period as it spends to keep up with demand.

Amazon reported first-quarter earnings of $2.5 billion, or $5.01 a share, down from $3.56 billion, or $7.09 a share, in the year-ago period. Revenue grew to $75.5 billion from $59.7 billion in the year-ago period. Analysts surveyed by FactSet had estimated $6.23 a share on revenue of $73.7 billion on average.

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American Airlines Stock Dives on Missed Earnings and Cash-Burn Rate
American Airlines missed earnings estimates for the first quarter, and the stock traded lower Wednesday as investors appeared unimpressed with the company’s efforts to conserve cash and cut costs in the face of the coronavirus.

American reported an adjusted loss of $2.65 a share, missing consensus estimates for a loss of $2.33 a share in the first quarter. Revenue came in at $8.5 billion, below estimates of $8.9 billion. If there was good news in the report, it was that American’s liquidity appears to have stabilized. The company said it had $6.8 billion of cash and available funds at the end of the first quarter and expects to have $11 billion by the end of June.

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Altria Sales Boosted by Strong Tobacco Demand in Lockdown
Altria stock climbed in early trading on Thursday as the tobacco giant said demand for its products surged in the first quarter but warned consumers would soon turn to cheaper brands.

Revenue grew 13% to $6.36 billion in the first quarter, beating the FactSet consensus of $5.79 billion. Shipments of cigarettes and cigars rose 6.2%, led by a 6.7% rise in Marlboro cigarettes.

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McDonald’s First-Quarter Earnings Were Worse Than Expected
Shares of McDonald’s were down on Thursday after it reported a sharper-than-expected decline in first-quarter profit, largely driven by the global coronavirus pandemic.

The fast-food chain reported a near-15% decline in its diluted first-quarter earnings per share to $1.47, a larger drop than Wall Street’s forecasts of a 9% decline to $1.56. Its net income fell 17%, also more severe than forecast.

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Facebook Sees ‘Signs of Stability’ in Ad Trends. Revenue Beats Forecasts.
Facebook shares rallied on Thursday after the social network said late Wednesday that its advertising business is showing signs of stabilizing from a slide due to the coronavirus crisis.

The company declined to give detailed financial forecasts for the second quarter or the full year, but it provided encouraging details on its business for the quarter to date. The news echoed comments made Tuesday by Alphabet in its own March quarter earnings report.

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Copyright ©
2020 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Not for redistribution.
The information provided here is for general informational purposes only and should not be considered an individualized recommendation or personalized investment advice. The investment strategies mentioned here may not be suitable for everyone. Each investor needs to review an investment strategy for his or her own particular situation before making any investment decision.

All expressions of opinion are subject to change without notice in reaction to shifting market or economic conditions.

Past performance is no guarantee of future results and the opinions presented cannot be viewed as an indicator of future performance.

Market Brief: April 29, 2020

A daily summary of news, analysis and data shaping the market.
Market Brief
Wednesday, April 29, 2020
High Hopes. U.S. stocks finished at their highest level in weeks on Wednesday as investors assessed progress on treatment for the novel strain of coronavirus and the Federal Reserve pledged to use its policy tools to help limit the economic damage from business shutdowns intended to slow down the spread of the virus. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose around 532 points, or 2.2%, to around 24,634, marking its highest level since March 10, the S&P 500 index advanced 2.7%, to about 2940, representing its highest close since March 6, while the Nasdaq Composite Index closed up 3.6% at about 8915. Helping set the stage for gains on the day was data from Gilead Sciences, which showed that its anti-malarial drug remdesivir was successful in treating certain patients with Covid-19. Meanwhile, The New York Times on Wednesday reported that the Food and Drug Administration is
preparing to grant an emergency-use authorization as early as Wednesday. Elsewhere, the Fed kept interest rates at a range of 0% and 0.25% but said that it intends to do whatever is necessary to help support an economy and market beleaguered by the viral outbreak.
CHANGE
DJIA 24,633.86 532.31
S&P 500 2,939.51 76.12
NASDAQ 8,914.71 306.98
US 10-Year Note 0.62 0.00
Dollar Index 99.52 -0.34
Crude Oil 15.34 3.00
Gold 1,730.60 8.40
Global Dow 2,688.92 64.49
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Gilead Sciences Had Good News on Virus Drug. More Data Are Coming Soon.
Gilead Sciences said Wednesday that a controlled study of its antiviral remdesivir conducted by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases found that the drug had shortened the time to recovery for Covid-19 patients.

Details were scant in the news release, which said that the NIAID, part of the National Institutes of Health, would provide more information soon. A NIAID spokesperson said the institute had no further information at the moment, but was planning an announcement as early as later Wednesday.

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Microsoft Tops $10 Billion in Earnings, Beating Even Pre-Coronavirus Expectations
Microsoft Corp. outperformed the financial expectations that it faced even before the coronavirus in an earnings report Wednesday, sending shares slightly higher in after-hours trading.

Microsoft reported fiscal third-quarter earnings of $10.75 billion, or $1.40 a share, on sales of $35 billion Wednesday, up from profit of $1.14 a share on revenue of $30.57 billion a year ago. Analysts on average expected earnings of $1.27 a share on sales of $33.76 billion, according to FactSet.

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GDP Declines at 4.8% Pace in First Quarter. That’s Worse Than Economists Expected.
The U.S. economy contracted at a 4.8% pace in the first quarter, representing the start of the pain inflicted by the coronavirus pandemic.

The Commerce Department said Wednesday that the economy shrank at the fastest rate since the last recession as governments responded to the spread of Covid-19 with stay-home orders in March, leading to rapid changes in demand as businesses and schools switched to remote work or closed and consumers canceled, restricted, or redirected their spending. The decline was worse than the 4% contraction economists polled by Bloomberg anticipated.

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Fed Chief Vows a Long-Term, Robust Response to Nurse Economy Back to Health
The Federal Reserve on Wednesday reiterated that it would continue to support the U.S. economy as it suffers the consequences of the coronavirus crisis.

The Fed’s policy-setting arm, the Federal Open Market Committee, left interest rates unchanged in a range of 0% to 0.25% and refrained from announcing any new policies meant to prop up a quickly deteriorating economy. Since early last month, the Fed has responded quickly to evolving economic and financial conditions with little regard for its official meeting schedule.

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Fed Will Broaden a Key Support Program for Credit Markets
The Federal Reserve is planning to backstop a broader range of credit markets, and the expansion could start relatively soon, according to comments from Chairman Jerome Powell.

Officials are close to releasing updated details for their Main Street Lending Program, Powell said on Wednesday. The central bank will “keep looking to add products and add different borrowers to it as we go,” he said.

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Home Purchase Applications Rose Last Week. It’s a Bright Spot in a Tough Housing Market.
Applications for loans to purchase a home increased for the second week in a row, according to data released by the Mortgage Bankers Association, or MBA, Wednesday. That’s a little good news for the U.S. residential real estate market, which has been plagued by the economic impact of the coronavirus pandemic.

The volume of home purchase applications jumped by 12% week over week on a seasonally adjusted basis, or 13% on a non-seasonally adjusted basis, for the week ending April 24, according to the MBA. The same index increased 2% on a seasonally adjusted basis, or 3% non-seasonally adjusted, the week prior.

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Tesla Surprises With First-Quarter Profit
Tesla posted a surprise profit in the first quarter, the first to reflect the economic destruction wrought by the coronavirus pandemic.

Tesla late Wednesday said it earned $16 million, or 9 cents a share, in the first quarter, versus losses of $2.90 a share in the year-ago period. Adjusted for one-time items, the company earned $1.24 a share. Sales rose to $5.99 billion from $4.5 billion a year ago. Shares rose more than 2% following the report.

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Boeing Reports Significant First-Quarter Loss
Commercial aerospace giant Boeing lost $1.70 a share—net of all adjustments—from $16.9 billion in sales in the first quarter. Analysts had predicted a loss of $1.57 per share from $17.3 billion in sales.

“The Covid-19 pandemic is affecting every aspect of our business, including airline customer demand, production continuity and supply chain stability,” said CEO Dave Calhoun in the company’s news release. “Our primary focus is the health and safety of our people and communities while we take tough but necessary action to navigate this unprecedented health crisis and adapt for a changed marketplace.” To adjust, Boeing is cutting aircraft production rates as well as staffing levels.

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Lyft Lays Off 17% of Staff and Reduces Executive Pay Amid Coronavirus Challenges
Lyft said Wednesday it plans to cut its staff by 982 jobs, or about 17% of its employees, as it moves to reduce operating expenses and cash flows “in light of the ongoing economic challenges resulting from the Covid-19 pandemic and its impact on the company’s business.”

The ride-sharing company said in a Securities and Exchange Commission filing that it will take $28 million to $36 million of restructuring and related charges, mostly in the second quarter, in connection with the cuts.

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Astrazeneca’s Strong First Quarter Shows the Stock Can Weather the Coronavirus Storm
AstraZeneca said on Wednesday it had kept its earnings outlook for the year as patients and hospitals stockpiling during the coronavirus pandemic helped drive sales and profits during the first quarter.

AstraZeneca posted a 16% rise in revenue to $6.4 billion during the first three months of 2020 compared with the same period a year earlier, driven by the strong growth across every therapy area and region. That beat analysts’ overall expectations of $5.91 billion, according to a consensus based on estimates by 12 analysts polled by FactSet.

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Copyright ©
2020 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Not for redistribution.
The information provided here is for general informational purposes only and should not be considered an individualized recommendation or personalized investment advice. The investment strategies mentioned here may not be suitable for everyone. Each investor needs to review an investment strategy for his or her own particular situation before making any investment decision.

All expressions of opinion are subject to change without notice in reaction to shifting market or economic conditions.

Past performance is no guarantee of future results and the opinions presented cannot be viewed as an indicator of future performance.

Market Brief: April 28, 2020

A daily summary of news, analysis and data shaping the market.
Market Brief
Tuesday, April 28, 2020
Weighing Reopenings. U.S. stocks gave up early gains to close mostly lower on Tuesday as investors gird for a slew of corporate earnings and the possibility that resuming normal economic activity could reignite coronavirus infection rates. The Dow Jones Industrial Average lost about 32 points, or 0.1%, to close near 24,101, while the S&P 500 gave up about 15 points, or 0.5%, to end the session near 2863. The technology-heavy Nasdaq Composite Index closed about 122 points, or 1.4%, lower, near 8608, with a full slate of tech names set to report earnings over the next few days. Investors were weighing the recent run-up for tech stocks since the mid-March market bottom against the possibility that the coming downturn could be worse than is commonly believed, and that a rush to resume normal activity could be dangerous. 3M shares jumped nearly 3% after it announced
earnings and sales that beat expectations.
CHANGE
DJIA 24,101.55 -32.23
S&P 500 2,863.39 -15.09
NASDAQ 8,607.73 -122.43
US 10-Year Note 0.61 -0.05
Dollar Index 99.88 -0.16
Crude Oil 12.67 -0.11
Gold 1,721.20 -2.60
Global Dow 2,625.02 17.84
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Alphabet Earnings Hit by ‘Significant Slowdown’ in Ad Sales
Google’s profits were damaged even more than expected as the Covid-19 pandemic caused “a significant slowdown in ad revenues,” parent company Alphabet revealed in a quarterly earnings report Tuesday.

Alphabet reported first-quarter earnings of $6.84 billion, or $9.87 a share, compared with $6.66 billion, or $9.50 a share, in the year-ago period, though the 2019 results took a hit from a large fine levied by the European Commission. Revenue after removing traffic-acquisition costs grew to $33.7 billion from $29.48 billion in the year-ago period.

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IBM Bucks the Trend and Raises Its Dividend for the 25th Straight Year
IBM did something on Tuesday that few companies are daring amid the Covid-19 pandemic: It raised its quarterly dividend.

This marks the 25th straight year that the computer giant has raised its payout—up a penny to $1.63 a share. IBM has been paying quarterly dividends continuously since 1916. Its shares now yield 5.17%.

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Pfizer, Merck Earnings Beat Expectations
Two of America’s biggest pharmaceutical companies, Pfizer and Merck, released earnings Tuesday morning that beat analyst expectations.

Pfizer reported first-quarter earnings of 80 cents per share, beating the S&P Capital IQ Consensus estimate of 71 cents. The company reported revenue of $12 billion for the quarter. Merck reported earnings of $1.50 per share, 16 cents more than the S&P Capital IQ Consensus estimate, and quarterly revenue of $12.1 billion. But while Merck lowered its guidance for the full 2020 fiscal year in light of the Covid-19 pandemic, Pfizer reaffirmed the guidance it issued before the pandemic was in full force.

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3M’s Earnings Were Surprisingly Strong. Health Care and Masks Boosted Sales.
The industrial conglomerate 3M turned in better-than-expected earnings results for the first quarter of 2020 in a surprise fueled by the company’s health-care and personal-safety-equipment operations.

The company earned $2.16 a share from $8.1 billion in sales, while Wall Street was looking for $2.03 in per-share earnings and $7.9 billion in sales. Health-care sales jumped 21% year over year. Last year, health-care sales grew 0.3% in the first quarter. Overall, health care represents about 22% of total sales at 3M.

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Caterpillar’s Earnings Miss Expectations
Caterpillar’s first-quarter earnings, at about $1.60 a share, fell short of Wall Street estimates for a result of $1.69, but the stock rose anyway because earnings, right now, don’t matter.

Covid-19 shelter-in-place mandates went into place at the end of March, so conditions for Caterpillar for most of the first quarter qualified as normal. What is most important to investors right now is the shape of the coming economic recovery. There isn’t, however, much in the earnings press release about a recovery. The company, like many other firms, has suspended its full-year financial guidance, cut costs, and gathered cash resources.

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UPS Sales Impress, but Earnings Fall Short
Shipping giant United Parcel Service missed Wall Street earnings estimates while blowing past sales estimates.

It was a wild quarter. Results reflect that. No one knew exactly what to expect. Many industrial businesses that UPS delivers to are closed to help slow the spread of Covid-19. Wall Street earnings estimates, as a result, fell over the past few weeks. But UPS, along with its peer FedEx, are still working hard, delivering packages to homes and essential businesses despite the health risks.

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PepsiCo Sales Surge as Shoppers Stock Up
PepsiCo, the soda and snack giant, reported surging sales in the first quarter.

The beverage maker, which also owns Lay’s and Doritos, said organic sales grew 7.9% in the first three months of the year as consumers stocked up due to lockdown measures and shelter-in-place orders. Chief financial officer Hugh Johnston told analysts he expected second-quarter sales to decline at a low single-digit rate as restaurants, movie theaters, and other venues remain closed around the world.

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Good News on Oxford Vaccine Is Bright Spot in Somber Covid-19 Landscape
A vaccine developed by academic scientists at the University of Oxford is moving quickly into large clinical trials, giving investors a dose of optimism amid a grim landscape.

The vaccine effort, highlighted Monday in a New York Times article, is being run out of the British university’s Jenner Institute, which focuses on vaccine development. The laboratory began Phase 1 trials of the experimental vaccine on April 23, and said on April 24 that it planned to vaccinate 800 volunteers over the course of a month.

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Meat Shortages Are Coming as Coronavirus Shuts Down Packing Plants
The novel coronavirus has upended the U.S. meat-supply chain, with American consumers likely to face shortages of beef and pork before the end of May even as farmers are forced to slaughter millions of unwanted cattle and hogs.

Since the beginning of April, meatpacking plants across the country have been forced to shut in response to viral outbreaks that have infected thousands of workers. Meatpackers work in tight spaces and breathe recirculated air during long shifts, which makes it easy for the virus to transmit across the thousands of workers in a single plant. The United Food & Commercial Workers union estimates that 20 workers in meatpacking and food processing have already died from Covid-19, the disease caused by the new coronavirus.

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Harley-Davidson Braces for Loan Losses
Harley-Davidson reported another quarter of falling revenue in its motorcycle sales. Shipping 10% fewer bikes in the March 2020 quarter than in the 2019 period, the American icon reported an 8% revenue drop. But what knocked earnings down some 44% were the reserves it’s taking on loans it made to its bike buyers.

“Covid-19 has dramatically changed our business environment and it is critical we respond with agility to this new reality,” said Jochen Zeitz, who stepped in as acting chief executive after the February resignations of longtime leader Matt Levatich. He said the company was formulating a new strategic plan for growth and profits.

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Dow Jones Contact Us
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4300 Route 1 North, South Brunswick, NJ 08852
Copyright ©
2020 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Not for redistribution.
The information provided here is for general informational purposes only and should not be considered an individualized recommendation or personalized investment advice. The investment strategies mentioned here may not be suitable for everyone. Each investor needs to review an investment strategy for his or her own particular situation before making any investment decision.

All expressions of opinion are subject to change without notice in reaction to shifting market or economic conditions.

Past performance is no guarantee of future results and the opinions presented cannot be viewed as an indicator of future performance.

Market Brief: April 27, 2020

A daily summary of news, analysis and data shaping the market.
Market Brief
Monday, April 27, 2020
Glass Half Full. Stocks rose Monday, kicking the week off on a positive note, as several European countries, and some U.S. states, began or outlined plans to begin lifting lockdowns put in place to contain the Covid-19 pandemic. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose around 358 points, or 1.5%, to end near 24,134, according to preliminary figures, while the S&P 500 advanced around 42 points, or 1.5%, to close near 2878. The Nasdaq Composite jumped about 96 points, or 1.1%, to finish near 8730.
CHANGE
DJIA 24,133.78 358.51
S&P 500 2,878.48 41.74
NASDAQ 8,730.16 95.64
US 10-Year Note 0.66 0.05
Dollar Index 100.08 -0.30
Crude Oil 12.97 -3.97
Gold 1,726.60 -9.00
Global Dow 2,606.95 49.01
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Oil Is Plunging Again. The Stock Market Couldn’t Care Less.
Oil prices plunged again on Monday, with West Texas Intermediate crude falling more than 20%.

Yet oil company stocks, after falling along with the commodity, rebounded later in the morning. The disconnect is striking, given that oil stocks would normally plunge when futures were down this much.

West Texas Intermediate futures fell 25%, to $12.64 a barrel. Brent crude, the international benchmark, fell 8.4%, to $19.65 a barrel. The SPDR S&P Oil & Gas Exploration & Production exchange-traded fund was down just 1.1%.

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Diamond Offshore Bankruptcy May Portend Oil-Services Shakeup
Offshore oil-services firm Diamond Offshore filed for bankruptcy protection on Monday, a move that wasn’t a big surprise but nonetheless caused the stock to plunge. The company expects to continue operations and doesn’t plan to need more financing, it said in a statement.

Other drillers may follow Diamond into bankruptcy, or otherwise try to negotiate their debt. Oil production is likely to fall more before rebounding. In a few years, the industry is likely to be whittled down to a few larger players after the remaining companies merge, predicts Evercore analyst James West.

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Apple Is Delaying 5G iPhone Production by a Month, a News Report Says
For months now, Wall Street has been assuming that Apple would introduce the next generation of iPhones—the first with the ability to use 5G wireless networks—in September. That would be consistent with Apple’s timing in recent years. Recently some analysts have speculated that the timing could be a little delayed by complications related to Covid-19, such as the difficulty in getting Apple engineers based in the U.S. to supervise production of contract manufacturing in China.

Monday morning, The Wall Street Journal reported that the company is pushing back production of the new phones by about a month. Worth noting is that a production push-out doesn’t necessarily delay any planned announcement date. The story said Apple was pushing ahead with plans for four new iPhone models in three sizes: 5.4 inches, 6.1 inches and 6.7 inches. Some would have 5G; all will have OLED displays. The Journal said Apple is cutting its production plans for the second half of the year by about 20%.

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Boeing Is Jilting Embraer to Save Billions, but It Needs More Money
Boeing wants to walk away from its $4 billion agreement to purchase a controlling interest in the Embraer regional-jet business

Boeing’s announcement isn’t the end of the story. Not by a long shot. For Embraer, now comes arbitration. For Boeing, now come more questions about remaining cash. The original deal between the U.S. and Brazilian aerospace firms was struck in 2018, shortly after Boeing rival Airbus purchased a controlling stake in the Bombardier C-series program.

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Boeing CEO Sees Slow Airline Rebound, No Dividend for ‘Years’
Boeing’s head said Monday that restoring the dividend could take three to five years as the company girds for a slow air travel recovery in the wake of the coronavirus crisis.

The comment from Chief Executive David Calhoun was a signal that paying back debt and keeping up Boeing’s manufacturing supply chain were bigger priorities than paying dividends for the foreseeable future.

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Tesla’s Plan to Reopen Its U.S. Factory in California Is Bullish for the Stock
Tesla is reportedly bringing back workers to its Fremont, Calif. plant this week. It is one of the first signs of life for the automotive industry. And the move is bullish for Tesla stock, because it shows electric vehicles are selling despite the Covid-19 pandemic.

The Fremont plant is outside of San Francisco, where a stay-at-home order remains in place until at least May 4. It isn’t clear under what authority Tesla plans to recall workers, and the company didn’t respond to a request for clarification. There are still a few thousand Covid-19 cases diagnosed in that region.

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GM Suspends Its Dividend to Shore Up Its Balance Sheet
General Motors has suspended its dividend and halted share buybacks as part of a deal with lenders to extend a debt repayment timeline.

The auto maker had been paying a 38-cents-a-share quarterly dividend, for an annual dividend of $1.52, giving the stock a yield of 6.9%. In 2017, the company’s board approved a $5 billion increase in the company’s share buyback program. In all, the program authorized up to $14 billion of repurchases. So far under that program, it has bought back $10.6 billion.

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Zoom Shunned by a Growing List of Banks
A growing list of the world’s largest investment banks is joining the backlash against Zoom, limiting or outright banning staff from using the video conferencing app over fears about security and compliance.

Bank of America, BNP Paribas, Citigroup, Deutsche Bank, JPMorgan, Standard Chartered, and UBS have all advised their employees to use alternative video conferencing tools for client communication, according to people familiar with the matter.

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Saudi Arabia Bought Big Stake in Live Nation
The Public Investment Fund, Saudi Arabia’s sovereign-wealth fund, recently purchased a large stake in Live Nation Entertainment, a promoter of concerts and other events.

Live Nation stock has been hit hard as lockdowns to fight the coronavirus pandemic have forced the company to cancel events. Its executives have taken pay cuts. Most stocks have been volatile, but Live Nation has taken a bigger hit than most. The company’s share price has been cut nearly in half so far in 2020, compared with a 12.2% drop in the S&P 500 index, a measure of the broader market.

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Investors to Get a Look This Weekend at Warren Buffett’s Likely Successor
Berkshire Hathaway investors will get their first extended look at Greg Abel, a Berkshire vice chairman and potential successor to CEO Warren Buffett, when he and Buffett take questions on Saturday at Berkshire’s annual meeting in Omaha.

Buffett, who is 89 years old, and Abel, who is 57, will be the only directors present at the meeting, Berkshire said in a statement on Monday.

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Copyright ©
2020 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Not for redistribution.
The information provided here is for general informational purposes only and should not be considered an individualized recommendation or personalized investment advice. The investment strategies mentioned here may not be suitable for everyone. Each investor needs to review an investment strategy for his or her own particular situation before making any investment decision.

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Past performance is no guarantee of future results and the opinions presented cannot be viewed as an indicator of future performance.

Market Brief: April 20, 2020

A daily summary of news, analysis and data shaping the market.
Market Brief
Monday, April 20, 2020
Less Than Zero. U.S. stock indexes on Monday started the week sharply lower, as investors braced for a deluge in earnings this week and contended with an unraveling of the energy market, highlighted by a historic plunge into negative territory in the price of one oil contract. The Dow Jones Industrial Average finished down 592 points, or 2.4%, at around 23,650, the S&P 500 index declined 1.8% to 2823, while the Nasdaq Composite Index ended the session off by about 1% near 8561. The declines for the equity benchmarks come as the May contract for West Texas Intermediate oil, the front-month contract, which expires on Tuesday, dropped more than 300%, settling at negative $37.63 a barrel. About one-fifth of S&P 500 companies are set to report quarterly results this week, with investors expecting the worst earnings since the 2008 financial crisis, unsurprisingly due
to closures in response to the Covid-19 pandemic. Results this year for the first quarter are on track to decline 14.5% from a year ago, according to John Butters, senior earnings analyst at FactSet, which would represent the biggest decline since the 15.7% plunge in the third quarter of 2009.
CHANGE
DJIA 23,650.44 -592.05
S&P 500 2,823.16 -51.40
NASDAQ 8,560.73 -89.41
US 10-Year Note 0.63 -0.02
Dollar Index 99.99 0.21
Crude Oil -26.01 -44.28
Gold 1,712.10 13.30
Global Dow 2,584.25 -24.13
Powered by Dow Jones Research, FactSet, Eurostat, SIX Financial Information.
Oil Futures Go Negative in Historic Rout
West Texas Intermediate oil futures were plunging Monday afternoon—first into the single-digits and then into the red later in the afternoon. It was the first time since they started trading in 1983 that crude futures fell below $0. The previous settlement low was $10.42, which crude hit on March 31, 1986.

Oil has been tumbling for months, but fell off a cliff on Monday in part because of a technical shift. The May crude futures contract expires on Tuesday, and when futures expire their price tends to converge with the spot price of the commodity. Anyone buying the May contract on Monday is likely planning on taking physical possession of the oil. And no one right now seems to want to own a barrel of oil at any price.

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IBM Profit Beat Estimates, but the Company Declined to Forecast the Rest of 2020
IBM reported better-than-expected first-quarter profit, but withdrew its full-year guidance and declined to provide a projection on second-quarter results, given the Covid-19 pandemic and its impact on the global economy.

For the quarter, the enterprise-computing company posted revenue of $17.6 billion, down 3.4% from a year earlier, but in line with Street estimates. IBM said revenue was up 0.1% when adjusted for divested businesses and currency. Non-GAAP profit was $1.84 a share, a nickel ahead of the Street consensus at $1.79 a share.

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United Airlines’ Preliminary Results Are Worse Than Wall Street Expected
United Airlines on Monday reported a preliminary net loss of $2.1 billion for the quarter ended in March, missing analysts forecasts for a net loss of $533 million. Revenue came in at $8 billion, a 17% decline year over year. Analysts had forecast $8.4 billion in sales, according to FactSet.

United expects to borrow up to $4.5 billion from the Treasury Department’s loan program—part of the Cares Act package of financial support for the airline industry. The company has also applied for $5 billion to help cover payrolls through September, including a $3.5 billion grant and $1.5 billion as a loan. United said it had $6.3 billion in cash and liquid investments as of April 16, including $2 billion in an undrawn credit facility.

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Neiman Marcus Could File for Bankruptcy as Soon as This Week
Neiman Marcus Group could become one of the first major retailers to file for bankruptcy because of the coronavirus shutdown.

The high-end department store is considering a filing as soon as this week, according to a Reuters report citing people familiar with the matter. The retailer is also said to be negotiating with creditors to obtain financing so it can maintain some operations during a restructuring.

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Shake Shack Is Returning Its Bailout Check
The burger chain Shake Shack said Sunday night that it will return a $10 million loan it got under the federal Covid-19 stimulus program, after news that the government’s small-business assistance program had run out of funds before helping many small, privately owned restaurants. The chain said it had raised $75 million from stock sales to tide itself over as the pandemic forces it to furlough many workers and only serve takeout.

As part of the Cares Act, the government’s Covid-19 rescue package, Congress provided $349 billion to help small businesses keep paying their employees. The Paycheck Protection Program, or PPP, is overseen by the Small Business Administration. Commercial banks give out the money as loans that will be forgiven if the small businesses hire back their workers by June. Although the program was meant to help businesses with 500 or fewer employees, big hotel and restaurant chains successfully lobbied to be included.

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DuPont’s Quarterly Earnings Beat Estimates
Chemical giant DuPont de Nemours—like many other companies recently—pre-announced first-quarter results and suspended full-year 2020 financial guidance. The Covid-19 pandemic has impacted every segment of the economy, including demand for chemicals.

The company’s first quarter numbers on Monday, however, look terrific. DuPont earned about 83 cents a share from $5.2 billion in sales. Wall Street analysts were looking for 68 cents from $5 billion in sales. The results easily beat expectations.

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Amazon Is Building a Delivery Powerhouse. Look Out, FedEx, UPS, USPS.
Amazon.com’s shares have rallied this year for the obvious reason that e-commerce is accelerating as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic, while before the arrival of coronavirus, the story was more about the company’s industry-leading cloud-computing business. Now, there could be another leg to the stool: package delivery.

In a research note Monday, BofA Global Research analyst Justin Post argues that Amazon’s enormous investment in logistics has created a valuable asset that will allow the company to become a major player in the package-delivery sector—and not just for goods sold on Amazon.com. Post contends the company’s delivery capabilities could be worth $100 billion to $230 billion by 2025.

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Online Gambling Is Booming—and That Could Persuade More States to Allow It
With casinos closed across the country and sports betting drying up, online casino-style gambling is proving to be a bright spot for the industry.

Internet gambling revenues (excluding sports betting) in New Jersey rose 66%, to $65 million in March, the state reported recently. Online gambling includes slots as well as table games like blackjack. New Jersey is a leader in internet gambling. “We believe the impact of Covid-19 could spur more states to legalize online casino and sports betting,” Morgan Stanley gaming analyst Thomas Allen wrote in a client note.

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Alibaba Plans Big Cloud Investment
Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba has announced a broad plan to bolster its cloud business in the coming years. Its shares traded higher following the news.

Alibaba said in a statement on Monday that it plans to invest an additional 200 billion yuan (approximately $28 billion) in cloud technology over the next three years, including operating systems, servers, chips, and network.

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Alexion Will Test Rare Disease Drug in Covid-19 Patients
The biotechnology firm Alexion Pharmaceuticals announced on Monday that it would join the ranks of companies seeking to repurpose existing medicines as potential Covid-19 therapies, saying that it would test its drug Ultomiris in severe Covid-19 patients.

Ultomiris has Food and Drug Administration approval in two rare diseases: atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome and paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria. It is the successor to another Alexion drug, Soliris, which is expected to face generic competition in the near future.

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Dow Jones Contact Us
| Privacy Policy
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4300 Route 1 North, South Brunswick, NJ 08852
Copyright ©
2020 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Not for redistribution.
The information provided here is for general informational purposes only and should not be considered an individualized recommendation or personalized investment advice. The investment strategies mentioned here may not be suitable for everyone. Each investor needs to review an investment strategy for his or her own particular situation before making any investment decision.

All expressions of opinion are subject to change without notice in reaction to shifting market or economic conditions.

Past performance is no guarantee of future results and the opinions presented cannot be viewed as an indicator of future performance.