AP
Business Highlights
Thursday July 24, 6:29 pm ET
Jobless claims jump as housing market gets weaker
WASHINGTON
(AP) -- Two cornerstones of the economy -- jobs and housing -- sank to new
depths Thursday, with unemployment claims bolting higher and home prices
recording one of their steepest drops on record.
The
Labor Department said the number of newly laid-off people filing for
unemployment benefits rose to 406,000 last week, a jump of a seasonally
adjusted 34,000. The last time jobless claims were higher was after the Gulf
Coast hurricanes in 2005.
The
housing news wasn't any better: As sales of previously owned homes fell in June
and a glut of unsold and foreclosed homes on the market, the value of
Americans' biggest asset continued to sag. The median price for a home sold in
June was $215,100, a drop of more than 6 percent from a year earlier and the
fifth-largest year-to-year price drop on record.
Stocks
tumble after sales of existing homes fall
NEW
YORK (AP) -- Wall Street abruptly ended an earnings-driven rally and closed
sharply lower Thursday after a steeper-than-expected decline in existing home
sales and worries about the financial sector chilled the market's recent
optimism.
Investors
punished shares of homebuilders and financial companies Thursday because both
sectors have struggled with the declining housing market.
The
Dow fell 283.10, or 2.43 percent, to 11,349.28. It was the biggest decline for
the Dow since June 26.
The
pullback erased the nearly 170 points added in the two prior sessions. Last
week, the Dow gained nearly 400 points. While some declines after the latest
rally wouldn't have come as a surprise, the drop Thursday revealed fresh unease
about the economy.
Oil
gains ground but natural gas continues slide
NEW
YORK (AP) -- Energy market investors managed to win back modest gains Thursday
following oil's big drop a day earlier, but again drove natural gas prices
sharply lower as a three-week sell-off of that fuel continued unabated.
Light,
sweet crude for September delivery rose $1.05 to settle at $125.49 a barrel on
the New York Mercantile Exchange -- gaining back only about a quarter of
Wednesday's decline. August natural gas tumbled 46.5 cents to settle at $9.283
per 1,000 cubic feet, its lowest point since March.
At
the gas pump, prices continued their retreat. The national average for a gallon
of regular dropped more than a penny and a half to $4.026 a gallon, according
to auto club AAA, the Oil Price Information Service and Wright Express. Retail
diesel is down nearly half a cent to $4.788.
GOP
kills effort to release oil from US stockpile
WASHINGTON
(AP) -- House Republicans on Thursday scuttled a bill that Democrats hoped
would help lower gasoline prices by forcing the Energy Department to release 70
million barrels of oil -- about a three-day supply -- from the national
stockpile.
Democrats
promised that the action would have produced immediate relief at the pump, as
was the case with similar releases in 1991, 2000 and 2005. The Strategic
Petroleum Reserve now holds about 700 million barrels.
Despite
winning a clear 268-157 majority, the measure still lost. Democratic leaders
had brought the proposal up for debate under rules requiring a two-thirds vote
to pass.
Ford,
Daimler, Hyundai profits fall; Renault up
DETROIT
(AP) -- Ford Motor Co. posted its worst quarterly loss ever Thursday in a
roiling global auto market that also saw profits fall at Daimler AG, Hyundai
Motor Co. and AutoNation Inc. Renault SA reported a profit increase in the
first half of the year but still plans to cut jobs and scale back production.
The
rising cost of oil and raw materials and the economic slowdown in North America
and Western Europe were generally to blame for the automakers' woes. In the
U.S., auto sales dropped 10 percent in the first half of the year as consumers
were stunned by high gas prices and falling home values. Sales in Europe
dropped 8 percent in June and threaten to continue their slide.
Bristol-Myers,
Eli Lilly post strong 2Q results
TRENTON,
N.J. (AP) -- Like other major drugmakers, Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. and Eli
Lilly & Co. saw benefits from the weak dollar in the second quarter, as
sales grew at a faster rate overseas, but both also posted improvements in
their U.S. businesses.
The
two, already are in the middle of restructuring programs like most of their
competitors, said Thursday they plan to cut even more jobs.
Still,
on a day when the major stock indexes were down significantly, the drugmakers'
shares got little traction despite their fairly strong reports.
NY
AG sues banking giant UBS for securities fraud
NEW
YORK (AP) -- New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo sued banking giant UBS for
fraud Thursday, accusing the company of marketing tens of billions of dollars
of auction-rate securities as safe even when they knew the investments were in
trouble.
The
civil lawsuit claims bank executives pulled their personal investments from the
floundering market last winter when they realized a crisis was brewing but
continued to tell customers all was well.
UBS
said in a statement that while some of its employees exercised "poor
judgment," none had engaged in illegal conduct.
Satellite
radio companies to pay $19.7 million
WASHINGTON
(AP) -- A merger of the nation's only two satellite radio companies moved
closer to fruition Thursday after the pair agreed to pay $19.7 million to
settle a case alleging violation of federal rules.
Federal
Communications Commission Chairman Kevin Martin told The Associated Press the
agency had reached an agreement late Wednesday night where XM Satellite Radio
Holdings Inc. will pay $17.5 million and Sirius Satellite Radio Inc. will pay
$2.2 million to resolve that issue.
The
agreement, which still requires a full vote of the commission, is expected to
lead to approval of Sirius's $3.9 billion buyout of XM, which has been under
regulatory review for more than a year.
Railroads
post solid 2Q profits despite floods
NEW
YORK -- Despite rapidly accelerating fuel costs and Midwest floods putting a
damper on profits, the nation's two largest railroad's second-quarter profits
were boosted by demand for farm products, coal and improving operational
efficiency.
Union
Pacific Corp., the largest U.S. railroad, said Thursday its quarterly earnings
jumped 19 percent from a year earlier and beat analysts' expectations. Burlington
Northern Santa Fe Corp., meanwhile, reported a 19 percent decline in net income
after the market closed, as costs related to an environmental cleanup
overshadowed better pricing and strong segment revenue growth. Excluding
one-time costs, BNSF's profit came in above Wall Street's views.
Both
companies reported robust growth in shipments of agricultural products such as
corn, grain and soybeans.
Rough
June for newspapers portends bleak future
NEW
YORK (AP) -- Regional and national newspaper publishers, already staggering
with a drop in ad revenue more severe than the industry has seen since the
Great Depression, say the second half of 2008 may be even worse.
Three
publishers -- McClatchy Co., Lee Enterprises Inc. and E.W. Scripps Co. --
reported Thursday that their profits had fallen by nearly half in the second
quarter compared to last year.
They
joined industry heavyweights New York Times Co. and Gannet Co., which reported
earnings Wednesday and last week, in saying double-digit drops in ad revenue were
most to blame for plunging profits, though rising costs played a role too.
AP
told 3 bidders make final cut to buy Cubs
NEW
YORK (AP) -- Tribune Co. is inviting at least three potential buyers who each
submitted bids for the Chicago Cubs and Wrigley Field near or above $1 billion
to participate in a second round of proposals, according to a person involved
in the process.
Several
bidders offering between $700 million and $900 million for all the properties
have been excluded from the second round, according to the person, who spoke on
condition of anonymity because of nondisclosure agreements governing all talk
about the bids.
By
The Associated Press
The
Dow fell 283.10, or 2.43 percent, to 11,349.28.
Broader
stock indicators also declined. The Standard & Poor's 500 index fell 29.65,
or 2.31 percent, to 1,252.54. The technology-heavy Nasdaq composite index fell
45.77, or 1.97 percent, to 2,280.11.
Light,
sweet crude for September delivery rose $1.05 to settle at $125.49 a barrel on
the New York Mercantile Exchange.
In
other Nymex trading, heating oil futures 1.7 cent to settle at $3.5671 a gallon
while gasoline futures rose 2.5 cents to settle at $3.0594 a gallon.
In
London, Brent crude for September delivery rose $1.15 to settle at $126.44 a
barrel on the ICE Futures exchange in London.