Houston Chronicle

Stocks shake off early loss, close higher

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NEW YORK — U.S. stocks reversed course from an early slump and closed higher Thursday to break a two-day losing streak after technology and bank stocks rallied.

Corporate earnings are in full swing and investors have been cautiously assessing results and company statements. The volatile market is still on track for a weekly loss despite the S&P 500 opening the week with a record high close. The pullback has barely dented the big gains made by every major index this year, including a 19.5 percent rise for the S&P 500 index.

The latest batch of results are providing a better picture of the economy after months of ups and downs in the market because of policy concerns and lingering trade disputes.

“We’ve been watching the game and now we actually get to see the scorecard,” said Brad McMillan, chief investment officer for Commonweal­th Financial Network.

The results so far have reflected financial strength from banks as the broader economy holds up with solid job growth and conported confidence.

“The consumers are still making things happen out there and it’s showing up in the earnings to a surprising degree,” he said.

The S&P 500 index rose 10.69 points, or 0.4 percent, to 2,995.11. The Dow Jones Industrial Average edged up 3.12 points to 27,222.97. It was down as much as 151 points earlier. The Nasdaq composite rose 22.04 points, or 0.3 percent, to 8,207.24.

IBM rose 4.6 percent after reporting solid results. The company, along with Apple, helped lift the technology sector to lead the broader gains.

Banks led financial stocks higher. BB&T rose 2.8 percent and SunTrust Banks rose 2.7 percent. Both reported earnings that easily beat analysts’ estimates.

Medical equipment makers helped health care stocks reverse course after an early loss. Danaher rose 2.4 percent after reporting solid second quarter results. Abbott Laboratori­es and Thermo Fisher both rose 2.3 percent.

Market indexes were down most of the day after Netflix plunged 10.3 percent in heavy trading and took other communicat­ions companies down with it. The streaming video service resumer a slump in new subscriber­s that could mean trouble as it faces a new wave of competitio­n from Disney and Apple.

Communicat­ions stocks remained the day’s biggest loser. Consumer-oriented and energy stocks also fell. Dollar Tree shed 1.9 percent and Apache lost 3.8 percent.

Financial results remain a mixed bag for many companies. Only about 13 percent of S&P 500 companies have reported, according to FactSet, and analysts expect profits to fall 2.4 percent overall when every report is tallied.

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