By Kate Gibson and Victor Reklaitis, MarketWatch
NEW YORK (MarketWatch) -- U.S. stocks ended slightly higher
Tuesday, with the Nasdaq Composite positioned for its best monthly
performance since January 2012, as investors mostly adopted a
cautious tone a day ahead of a monetary-policy decision from the
Federal Reserve.
Of the 304 companies that have reported earnings results for the
second quarter, 201 have beaten estimates, 76 have missed, and 27
have met, producing a a beat rate of 66%, above the historical
average, according to research by Christine Short, an associate
director S&P Capital IQ.
"Earnings so far are better than expected, but we haven't seen
much in the way of revenue figures," said Robert Pavlik, chief
market strategist at Banyan Partners LLC.
After a 72-point gain and a 43-point drop, the Dow Jones
Industrial Average (DJI) ended off 1.38 points at 15,520.59.
Pfizer Inc. (PFE) rose 0.4% after the drug maker and Dow
component posted second-quarter results.
The S&P 500 index (SPX) advanced nearly 1 point to 1,685.96,
with technology leading sector gains and telecommunications falling
hardest.
The Nasdaq Composite (RIXF) climbed 17.33 points, or 0.5%, to
3,616.47, with the technology laden index up 6.3% for July, on
track for its best monthly performance since January 2012.
Advancers pulled just ahead of decliners on the New York Stock
Exchange, where almost 678 million shares traded. Composite volume
neared 3.3 billion.
On Monday, composite volume on the NYSE came in just under 2.8
billion, the seventh lowest volume day so far this year.
"People are a little skeptical here, there's a pattern that is
raising questions for the overall market, whether we can continue
the trend of gains without any kind of give back," said Pavlik,
referring to a market that is up 18% for the year.
The dollar (DXY) gained against the currencies of major U.S.
trading partners and the yield on the benchmark 10-year note
(10_YEAR) held flat at 2.604%.
Oil futures (CLU3) dropped $1.47, or 1.4%, to $103.08 a barrel
and gold prices (GCZ3) declined $4.80, or 0.4%, to $1,325.80 an
ounce on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
Moving issues
Community Heath Systems Inc. (CYH) fell 3.5% after the
for-profit hospital operator said it would buy competitor Health
Management Associates Inc. (HMA) for $3.9 billion. Shares of Health
Management Associates slid nearly 11% after the company said it had
received more subpoenas from regulators seeking information about
its doctor relationships and some of its emergency-room
operations.
J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. (JPM) agreed to pay a $285 million
penalty and disgorge $125 million to settle allegations of
energy-market manipulation in California and the Midwest. Shares of
the Dow component were off 0.7%.
Sprint Corp. (S) rose 7.3% after the telecommunications firm
posted a larger quarterly loss but revenue expanded as consumers
spent more on mobile services.
Facebook Inc. (FB) gained 6.2% after the social-networking
company announced the launch of a mobile-games unit.
Related story: Facebook investors (nearly) break even.
Pitney Bowes Inc. (PBI) jumped nearly 13% after the supplier of
postal meters and other equipment reached an agreement to sell its
management-services unit to Apollo Global Management LLC (APO) for
about $400 million.
Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. (GT) jumped 8.9% after its
second-quarter earnings beat expectations.
Aetna Inc. shares (AET) shed 0.7% and Eastman Chemical Co. (EMN)
shares rallied 6.3% after both companies reported quarterly
earnings that surpassed expectations.
Coach Inc. (COH) retreated 7.9% after the maker of luxury
handbags reported a drop in fourth-quarter profit.
Behind the Storefront: Coach's outlet-store conundrum.
Shares of Mosaic Co. (MOS) declined 17% as the company and other
fertilizer manufacturers were hit by price concerns that came with
a dissolving partnership among the top potash producers.
The Federal Open Market Committee on Tuesday began a two-day
session, with the central bank likely to hold its benchmark
interest rate at 0.25%. Many strategists believe the central bank
will begin curbing its monthly bond purchases in September.
Tuesday economic reports had the S&P/Case-Shiller index of
property values rising 12.2% from May 2012 to last month, its
largest 12-month rise in more than 13 years, showing continuing
improvement in residential real estate.
Separately, the Conference Board's consumer-confidence index
fell to 80.3 in July from an upwardly revised five-year high of
82.1 the prior month.
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