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STOCKS GO NOWHERE: Here's what you need to know

Oct 22, 2016, 01:35 IST

A sea lion sleeps on a retaining wall at the Coast Guard Pier in Monterey, California March 17, 2015. Animal rescue centers in California are being inundated with stranded, starving sea lion pups, raising the possibility that the facilities could soon be overwhelmed, the federal agency coordinating the rescue said.Michael Fiala/Reuters

Stocks opened down on Friday after mixed earnings results from McDonalds, which reported stronger-than-expected sales growth, and General Electric, which cut its revenue forecast.

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At 9:33 a.m. ET, the Dow is down 104 points (-0.58%), the S&P 500 is down 10 points (-0.5%) and the Nasdaq is down 10 points (-0.2%).

As the day went on, stocks retraced some of their losses and finished little changed.

First up, the scoreboard:

  • Dow: 18,145.92, -16.43, (-0.09%)
  • S&P 500: 2,140.51, -0.86, (-0.04%)
  • Nasdaq: 5,252.18, +10.42, (+0.20%)
  • WTI crude oil: $50.84, +0.21, (+0.41%)
  • 10-year Treasury yield: 1.742%, -0.5 basis points
  1. Time Warner skyrocketed after reports that AT&T is closing in on a takeover. Shares spiked more than 13% to a 15-month high after the Wall Street Journal reported that it's in "advanced talks" to be acquired by AT&T.
  2. McDonald's is still killing it because of all-day breakfast. The company said its comparable-store sales, or sales at locations open for at least one year, rose 3.5%, topping the forecast for 1.5% growth, according to data from Bloomberg.
  3. The oil rig count rose for the 8th straight week, according to oilfield-services giant Baker Hughes. The rig count has increased since June as operators became more bullish on the market.
  4. Sketchers crashed after blaming its weak earnings on a "shorter back-to-school period." Shares tanked by nearly 17% around 10:20 a.m. ET after the firm reported earnings of $0.42 a share, lower than analysts' expectations for $0.46 a share. Revenue also came in light at $942 million against expectations for $954 million.
  5. The Canadian dollar got whacked after some disappointing data. The currency was down by 0.8% at 1.3336 per US dollar around 2:52 p.m. ET. Earlier, core retail sales came in at 0.0% month-over-month in August, below expectations of an increase of 0.3%, and CPI rose only 0.1% month-over-month in September, below expectations of a 0.2% uptick.
  6. In other FX news, the euro dropped to its lowest level since March after the European Central Bank said it wouldn't taper policy anytime soon. The currency was down by 0.6% at 1.0868 against the dollar around 11:58 a.m. ET.

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