U.S. stock futures were lower Wednesday morning, indicating stocks may have a second day of declines. As money markets worldwide continue improving, attention has shifted to corporate earnings and concerns are growing how a global slowdown would slow them. Asian markets closed sharply lower and European stocks tumbled at the open as well. Meanwhile, oil veered below $70 a barrel again despite a probably OPEC production cut on fears the U.S. economy is headed into a sever recession that would crimp demand for oil. Today weekly crude inventories will be released.Apple Inc. (NASDAQ: AAPL) is one company that is bucking the earnings trend. The consumer electronics giant reported results after the close Tuesday, surprising the Street with higher earnings as all three product categories showed improvement. Specifically it sold far more iPhones than expected, actually outselling market-leading BlackBerry from Research in Motion Ltd (NASDAQ: RIMM). The company, known for always lowballing estimates, gave a weak outlook that didn't affect investors sentiment much. AAPL shares, which jumped nearly 13% in after-hours trading, are up nearly 8% this morning in pre-market trade. Analysts liked in general iPhone sales with Calyon Securities upgrading Apple to Buy from Add, and Goldman Sachs recommending investors to buy shares. Still, UBS has downgraded Apple from Buy to Neutral.
Yahoo! Inc. (NASDAQ: YHOO)'s show, on the other hand, was quite different than Apple's. While the stock is also up in pre-market action -- 2.7% (it was up 7% in after-hours trade Tuesday afternoon) -- it is mainly due to the severe cost cuts the internet giant has announced during the dusmal earnings release. As it was saying profit plunged 64%, Yahoo! also said it is redcucing its workforce by 10% or some 1,500 employees.
VMWare Inc. (NYSE: VMW) shares are jumping nearly 16% in pre-market trading after it reported a 29% jump in third-quarter earnings due mostly to strong growth in services revenue. Results were much stronger-than-forecast.
Some of today's releases include four Dow compononets -- Merck & Co., Inc. (NYSE: MRK), AT&T Inc. (NYSE: T), Boeing Co. (NYSE: BA) and McDonald's Corp. (NYSE: MCD) -- as well as some biotechs, ConocoPhillips (NYSE: COP), Amgen (NASDAQ: AMGN), General Dynamics Corp. (NYSE: GD), Kimberly-Clark Corp. (NYSE: KMB), Wachovia (NYSE: WB) and Amazon.com, Inc. (NASDAQ: AMZN).
Wal-Mart Stores Inc. (NYSE: WMT) CEO said while speaking in Beijing the U.S. economy will recover sooner if energy prices stay low. Wal-Mart will set new quality standards for its China suppliers.
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