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U.S. Stocks Advance for Third Week as Earnings Beat Estimates

U.S. stocks rose for a third week, completing the Dow Jones Industrial Average’s best month since 2002, as companies from Motorola Inc. to MasterCard Inc. topped analysts’ profit estimates.
Amgen Inc., the world’s largest biotechnology company, and Dow Chemical Co., the largest U.S. chemical maker, gained after earnings beat projections. General Electric Co. surged 11 percent on speculation new banking rules will allow it to keep its finance unit. Yahoo! Inc. slumped after terms of an Internet-search accord with Microsoft Corp. were less favorable than analysts predicted.
“What’s been driving the market is the idea that maybe this recession isn’t going to be as severe or prolonged as we thought,” said Samuel Stewart, president of Wasatch Funds, which manages $5 billion in Salt Lake City. “The market is now behaving as though the credit crisis was a blip on the radar.”
The S&P 500 rose 0.8 percent to 987.48, the highest since Nov. 4, capping its fifth straight monthly advance. The main benchmark for American equity has rebounded 46 percent from a 12-year low on March 9. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 78.37 points, or 0.9 percent, to 9,171.61, extending its monthly advance to 8.6 percent, the biggest since October 2002. The Russell 2000 Index of small companies added 1.5 percent to 556.71.
Earnings Top Estimates
About three-quarters of the 148 companies in the S&P 500 that released second-quarter results this week topped estimates, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Companies slated to report next week include Kraft Foods Inc., Procter & Gamble Co. and Cisco Systems Inc.
Companies in the S&P 500 are still headed for a record eighth consecutive decline in quarterly profits. Per-share earnings have tumbled 32 percent for the 352 companies in the S&P 500 that have reported results since June 17. Analyst estimates compiled by call for a 31 percent drop in the second quarter and a 22 percent third-quarter decline. While earnings are falling, results have topped projections by an average 10 percent.
“There is a broader sense that the decline is over,” said Stephen Lieber, chief investment officer of Alpine Mutual Funds in Purchase, New York, which manages $6 billion. “Corporate earnings in the last week have been singular in importance.”
Motorola climbed 8.8 percent to $7.16. The biggest U.S. mobile-phone maker posted a narrower second-quarter loss than analysts projected, helped by job cuts and a recovery in handset shipments.
MasterCard Climbs
MasterCard rose 4.6 percent to $194.03. The world’s second- biggest payment-card network reported earnings excluding some items of $2.68 a share, 11 percent higher than the average analyst estimate. MasterCard raised fees, slashed expenses and processed more transactions during the quarter.
Amgen added 2.3 percent to $62.31. The world’s largest biotechnology company raised its full-year earnings forecast after second-quarter profit excluding some items beat the average analyst estimate by 11 percent. Amgen cut research costs and increased sales of its arthritis drug Enbrel.
Dow Chemical advanced 4.9 percent to $21.17. The largest U.S. chemical maker posted an unexpected second-quarter profit as demand for its products stabilized. The average analyst estimate was for a loss.
GE Gains
General Electric, the world’s biggest non-bank financial company, advanced 11 percent to $13.40. U.S. Representative Barney Frank said manufacturers that already own finance businesses should be allowed under revised banking rules to retain them without being subject to Federal Reserve oversight of their manufacturing operations. Frank heads the U.S. House Financial Services Committee.
Financial stocks in the S&P 500 climbed 4.4 percent, the steepest among 10 industries. Old National Bancorp, an Indiana- based financial-service company, reported second-quarter profit excluding some items that was more than four times the average analyst estimate, sparking a rally in regional banks.
Marshall & Ilsley Corp., Wisconsin’s largest lender, led gains, surging 26 percent to $6.04. Old National climbed 15 percent to $11.30 and Zions Bancorp., the Utah lender that operates in 10 Western states, rose 21 percent to $13.58.
Yahoo fell 18 percent to $14.32. The owner of the second- most popular U.S. Internet search engine will use Microsoft’s search engine on its Web sites and sell ads that appear next to search results. The agreement with Microsoft, the world’s largest software maker, didn’t include an upfront payment for Yahoo, which some analysts had estimated could be as much as $3 billion.
Recession Saps Demand
Exxon Mobil Corp. led energy companies to the second- biggest decline among the S&P 500’s 10 main industry groups. The world’s largest energy company fell 2.6 percent to $70.39 after reporting its lowest profit in more than five years as the recession sapped fuel demand.
Masco Corp. rose 26 percent to $13.93 for the biggest gain in the S&P 500. The insulation installer forecast a loss this year of as little as 5 cents a share, compared with the average analyst loss estimate of 26 cents.
Akamai Technologies Inc. fell 22 percent to $16.44 for the biggest drop in the S&P 500. The provider of software that makes Web sites load faster reported profit excluding some items of 40 cents a share in the second quarter, missing the average analyst estimate by 1.5 percent.
Reports next week will probably show employers cut jobs at a slower pace in July and the factory slump eased, according to economists’ forecasts, suggesting the recession is ending.



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U.S. Stocks Advance for Third Week as Earnings Beat Estimates

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