Los Angeles Times

Google pushes Nasdaq to record

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A strong week fizzled to a close Friday as the stock market eked out a small gain. But a few companies made big moves. Google surged after reporting strong results, pushing the Nasdaq to another record high.

It was a quiet end to an eventful week. Markets around the world rallied Monday after Greece and its creditors agreed to a broad framework for a new loan program. Stronger quarterly earnings reports from a range of big U. S. companies, including Citigroup and JPMorgan Chase, added more encouragem­ent.

“It appears the sky is clearing,” said Linda Duessel, senior equity strategist at Federated Investors.

Before this week, concerns about China’s plunging stock market and the prospect of Greece leaving the euro “had been bogging us down,” she said.

The Standard & Poor’s 500 index edged up 2.35 points, or 0.1%, to close at 2,126.64. The broad- market measure f inished the week with a gain of 2.4%, its best performanc­e in four months.

The Nasdaq rose 46.96 points, or 0.9%, to 5,210.14, closing out its best week in nine months.

The Dow Jones industrial average fell 33.80 points, or 0.2%, to 18,086.45.

Google jumped after it reported profit and sales that topped analysts’ forecasts late Thursday. The results ended six consecutiv­e quarters in which Google’s earnings fell short of analysts’ targets. Google rose $ 97.84, or 16%, to $ 699.62.

Earnings reports out this week have looked better than Wall Street expected. Analysts forecast that second- quarter earnings would shrink 3.3% compared with last year, according to S& P Capital IQ. Last week, the prediction was for a drop of 4.4%.

Greece’s deal cleared another hurdle Friday when German lawmakers overwhelmi­ngly backed it. The European Union also said it would get Athens enough money for it to keep making its debt payments.

Europe’s major markets finished mixed after rallying earlier this week. Germany’s DAX lost 0.4% and France’s CAC edged up 0.1%. Britain’s FTSE 100 slipped 0.3%.

Bond prices barely moved, leaving the 10- year Treasury note at 2.35%. The dollar dropped to 124.06 yen while rising to $ 1.0838 for every euro.

In commoditie­s trading, precious and industrial metals sank. Gold dropped $ 12 to settle at $ 1,131.90 an ounce and silver sank 15 cents to $ 14.92 an ounce. Copper fell 3 cents to $ 2.50 a pound.

Benchmark U. S. crude oil fell 2 cents to close at $ 50.89 a barrel in New York. Brent crude, the internatio­nal benchmark, rose 18 cents to close at $ 57.10 a barrel in London.

In other trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange:

8 Wholesale gasoline rose 3.2 cents to close at $ 1.929 a gallon.

Heating oil fell 0.2 cent to close at $ 1.664 a gallon.

Natural gas increased 1.6 cents to close at $ 2.870 per 1,000 cubic feet.

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