01.08.2008 12:10

Stock market: Thursday summary

Stock market fixing:
Nikkei 225 +9.02 +0.1% 13,376.81
Topix +0.63 +0.1% 1,303.62
DAX 30 +19.44 (+0.3%) 6479.56
САС 40 +5.02 (+0.11%) 4405.57
FTSE 100 -8.80 (-0.16%) 5411.90
Dow -205.67 (-1.78%) 11378.02
Nasdaq -4.17 (-0.18%) 2325.55
S&P -16.88 (-1.31%) 1267.38
10YR +26/32 3.94% 99 13/32
NYMEX Crude Oil -2.69 (-2.12%) $124.08

Most Japanese stocks advanced, paring a monthly decline, as investors sought haven in companies whose earnings can weather a global economic slowdown.
Kansai Electric Power Co., which hasn't recorded an annual loss in more than a decade, climbed the most since January. Takeda Pharmaceutical Co., Japan's largest drugmaker, gained after boosting its net income forecast by a quarter. Limiting gains, Nintendo Co. plunged the most in six months after a disappointing profit forecast.
Kansai Electric, the nation's second-largest power producer, surged 5%. Larger rival Tokyo Electric Power Co. jumped 4.6%.
Kansai Electric reported a 27.5 billion yen ($255 million) net loss for the first quarter after the close of trading as higher fuel costs eroded profitability.
Takeda jumped 4.2% percent to 5,750 yen. The company lifted its net income forecast for the current year by 25 percent to 200 billion yen as it integrates its $8.8 billion acquisition Millennium Pharmaceuticals Inc. Daiichi Sankyo Co., Japan's third-largest drugmaker, jumped 3.9%.
NTT DoCoMo Inc. added 1.7%. The country's largest mobile phone operator boosted quarterly profit in spite of declining revenue, while analysts had expected price competition among mobile operators would erode profitability.

European stocks fell, sending the Dow Jones Stoxx 600 Index to its third straight monthly drop, as reports showed the U.S. economy expanded at a slower-than- estimated pace and profits at Unilever trailed projections.
Unilever, the world's second-largest consumer-products company, had its steepest slump since June 2003 after earnings slipped 20 percent. Sanofi-Aventis SA, France's biggest drugmaker, retreated as a decline in sales dragged profit below estimates. BT Group Plc sank the most in eight years after reporting a fourth consecutive quarterly drop in earnings.
Outokumpu tumbled 32% this month after the world's fourth-biggest stainless-steel maker reported profit below analysts' estimates. SBM Offshore, the largest producer of floating oil production platforms, is down 38%.
Unilever dropped 8.4%. Net income fell to 909 million euros ($1.4 billion) from 1.14 billion euros a year earlier, the company said, below the 914.5 million- euro median estimate of analysts.
Sanofi-Aventis sank 4.7%. The drugmaker reported second-quarter earnings that missed estimates as savings from job cuts failed to offset a decline in sales. Sanofi raised its earnings guidance for the year.

European stocks had advanced earlier Thursday after earnings from AstraZeneca Plc, the U.K.'s second- largest drugmaker, and HBOS Plc exceeded projections.
AstraZeneca climbed 3.3% as the company reported second-quarter profit of $1.62 billion, topping the $1.45 billion median estimate in a survey.
HBOS added 7.1%, paring this year's decline to 60%. Britain's biggest mortgage lender said net income dropped to 931 million pounds ($1.84 billion) from 2.1 billion pounds a year earlier. That beat the 792 million-pound average estimate of analysts.

GDP, Exxon disappointments and jump in jobless claims drag on Wall Stree yesterday.


A government report that showed the economy grew at a slower-than-expected pace in the second quarter hit sentiment, as did a surge in initial jobless claims. Exxon Mobil, which reported sales and profit that fell short of forecasts, also dampened the mood.
The weak opening comes on the heels of a big two-day rally for stocks.
In the news on Thursday:
The economy grew at a faster pace in the second quarter than it did in the first quarter, but the pace of growth was not as fast as economists had forecast. The Commerce Department reported that GDP grew at an annual rate of 1.9% in the three months ended in June, up from a revised first-quarter growth rate of 0.9%. GDP for the fourth quarter of 2007 was revised lower, to a decline of 0.2%.
Exxon Mobil: The world's largest publicly traded oil company reported the largest quarterly profit in history, but missed expectations. Exxon reported net income of $11.68 billion. Analysts were looking for a profit of $12.1 billion. Exxon reported revenue of $138 billion, which missed analyst expectations of $144.4 billion.
Motorola announced modest profits for the second quarter, despite slumping handset sales. The tech giant posted earnings of 2 cents per share, excluding one-time charges, which was better than expected.






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