Stockmarket

US stocks struggle ahead of busy earnings week


Investing.com– U.S. stocks slipped Monday, easing from near record levels as investors looked ahead to a string of key earnings from the technology sector. 

At 12:59 ET (16:59 GMT), the fell 293 points, or 0.7%, the index dropped 0.3%, and the slipped 0.1%.

Tech earnings on tap this week 

Tesla (NASDAQ:) will be the biggest company to report this week, on Wednesday, with the electric vehicle maker’s earnings in close focus after the revealing of its robotaxi earlier this month largely underwhelmed. 

Prints from a string of major chipmaking firms are also due this week, coming after earnings from industry bellwethers ASML (NASDAQ:) and TSMC (NYSE:) provided mixed cues on demand. 

Texas Instruments (NASDAQ:), Western Digital Corporation (NASDAQ:) and Lam Research Corp (NASDAQ:) are among the majors chip stocks set to report, while in the broader tech sector, IBM (NYSE:), is also due this week. 

Beyond tech, earnings from major defense firms are also due this week, with Rtx Corp (NYSE:), Lockheed Martin (NYSE:), L3Harris Technologies (NYSE:), General Dynamics (NYSE:) and Northrop Grumman (NYSE:) set to report in the coming days. 

Telecom majors T-Mobile US (NASDAQ:), Verizon Communications (NYSE:) and AT&T (NYSE:) are also due. 

Boeing proposes new contract to end machinists strike; Kenvue in activist crosshairs

Planemaker Boeing (NYSE:), which is set to report quarterly results on Wednesday, rose more than 3% after unveiling a new proposal to its machinists’ union, with members of the union set to vote on the proposal on Wednesday. 

Kenvue (NYSE:) stock rose over 6% after it was reported activist investor Starboard Value has taken a stake in the consumer products firm behind brands like Band-Aid and Listerine which was spun off from Johnson & Johnson (NYSE:) last year.

Spirit Airlines (NYSE:) stock soared 57% after the carrier reached an agreement with the U.S. Bank National Association to extend a deadline by which it must extend or refinance its 2025 bonds to maintain its credit-card processing agreement with the bank.

Quiet economic data week 

It’s set to be a relatively quiet week on the U.S. economic calendar, but investors will get an update on the health of the housing sector with reports due out on both and . There are also reports on orders, consumer sentiment and .

On Wednesday, the Fed will publish its , a readout on economic conditions in the central bank’s 12 districts.

Market participants will also get a chance to hear from several regional Fed officials during the week, including Minneapolis Fed President Neel Kashkari, Kansas City Fed President Jeffrey Schmid, San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly, Philadelphia Fed President Patrick Harker and Richmond Fed President Thomas Barkin.

(Peter Nurse, Ambar Warrick contributed to this article.)





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