10/12/04:
Intel's Good News Bad News 3rd Quarter Report
LINDA O'BRYON: A mixed bag of earnings news from Intel today. The technology bellwether issued third quarter results after the bell, and the news was both good and not so good. On the positive side, Intel surpassed Street estimates on revenue, taking in $8.5 billion in the third quarter. That`s about $500 million ahead of what First Call expected. But Intel fell a penny shy of earnings estimates, making $0.26 a share in its third quarter. Those results do not include a one-time tax benefit of almost $0.04 a share. Intel struggled with weak microprocessor demand and excess inventory and chief financial officer Andy Bryant says that`s still the story heading into the fourth quarter.
ANDY BRYANT, CFO, INTEL: We`re in an environment where microprocessor sales are a little weaker than we expect. Inventory is being worked off. We are making progress against that. One of the effects of the situation we find ourselves in, margins are a little lower than we like.
O`BRYON: Bryant says Intel is looking for fourth quarter revenues in a range $8.6 billon to $9.2 billion. Now that compares to year ago revenues of $8.7 billion. Intel stock lost $0.33 to close at $20.28 during the regular trading session but was up about $0.60 after hours.
Nightly Business Report transcripts are available
on-line post broadcast. The program is transcribed by eMediaMillWorks.
Updates may be posted at a later date. The views of our guests
and commentators are their own and do not necessarily represent
the views of Community Television Foundation of South Florida,
Inc. Nightly Business Report, or WPBT. Information presented
on Nightly Business Report is not and should not be considered
as investment advice. Copyright (c) 2004 Community Television
Foundation of South Florida, Inc. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Terms
of use.
10/12/04:
How Unpredictable Oil Prices Can Impact The Economy
PAUL KANGAS: Oil prices topped $54 a barrel today, before backing down as traders took some profits. November crude futures finished down $1.13 at $52.51 a barrel. But prices at the gas pump are going up and threaten to derail the recent rebound in consumer spending. Suzanne Pratt looks at whether high energy prices could spark an economic slowdown.
SUZANNE PRATT, NIGHTLY BUSINESS REPORT CORRESPONDENT: It`s one of the big questions on Wall Street in 2004: how much of an impact will high oil prices have on the economy? Most experts agree surging energy costs are already taking a bite out of economic growth, but, so far, they say that bite has been pretty manageable, something in the order of about 0.5 percent to 1 percent of gross domestic product. With GDP expected to grow at an annual rate of about 4 percent in the fourth quarter of this year, experts say so far the economy is strong enough to weather an even greater impact from oil. That`s partly because on an inflation adjusted basis, oil prices are still well below levels seen during the oil shock of the 1970s. On top of that, the economy is far less dependent on oil today than it was 25 years ago.
MICKEY LEVY, CHIEF ECONOMIST, BANK OF AMERICA: It`s at less risk and the reason is the U.S. has become a much more efficient consumer of energy, if you consider, for example, energy consumption per unit of GDP. It`s half of what it was in the 1970s.
PRATT: Nevertheless, economists do agree that oil can have a bigger effect on the economy if prices spike higher, or if they stay elevated. Oil traders think that`s a real possibility.
ERIC BOLLING, INDEPENDENT TRADER: Things have changed. Supply disruption is for real. This potential terrorism premium is for real. Demand is for real. These are all reasons why $45 to $55 makes more sense to me than $35 to $50.
PRATT: So, at what price would oil trigger a recession for the economy? Most experts agree $50 or $60 a barrel isn`t enough to do it, but some believe significantly higher prices could.
ETHAN HARRIS, CHIEF U.S. ECONOMIST, LEHMAN BROTHERS: The economy is vulnerable to shocks. If we were to see, for example, $80 oil or something in that neighborhood, I think there`s a very significant chance of recession.
PRATT: Most experts believe a recession is still a pretty remote possibility. But they do agree we are probably stuck with high oil prices for sometime and that means a chronic problem for the U.S. economy. Suzanne Pratt, NIGHTLY BUSINESS REPORT, New York.
Nightly Business Report transcripts are available
on-line post broadcast. The program is transcribed by eMediaMillWorks.
Updates may be posted at a later date. The views of our guests
and commentators are their own and do not necessarily represent
the views of Community Television Foundation of South Florida,
Inc. Nightly Business Report, or WPBT. Information presented
on Nightly Business Report is not and should not be considered
as investment advice. Copyright (c) 2004 Community Television
Foundation of South Florida, Inc. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Terms
of use.
10/12/04:
This Year's Corn Harvest May Not Bring Too Much Dough
LINDA O`BRYON: It`s going to a huge fall harvest season for America`s farmers. A new government crop report is forecasting record levels of corn, soybeans and cotton. Take corn, for example, where the harvest will be about 15 percent larger than last year. But as Diane Eastabrook reports, the bumper crop is driving down prices and forcing some farmers to store, not sell, their harvest.
DIANE EASTABROOK, NIGHTLY BUSINESS REPORT CORRESPONDENT: It is the kind of corn crop farmers dream of. This year growing conditions throughout the Midwest were so good that farmers like Carl Neubauer are harvesting about 25 extra bushels an acre than they normally do. But here`s the downside: the weight of all this grain is crushing corn prices. Both the cash price and futures price of corn are so low, Neubauer is putting more than half of his crop into storage, instead of selling it now.
CARL NEUBAUER, FARMER: We`re hoping to see a recovery in prices, Diane, both flat price in terms of the Board of Trade going higher and basis, the difference between our cash price here and the price on the Board of Trade to improve.
EASTABROOK: The prospects for higher grain prices looked very good going into the spring planting season. Demand, especially from China, was strong and carry-over stocks from last year`s crop were low. But then two things happened: an unusually wet, cool summer produced more corn than anyone expected and transportation costs soared. Both cut into corn prices. At the Chicago Board of Trade, the December contract for corn has tumbled nearly 40 percent since the beginning of summer, and traders can`t predict when prices will rebound.
VICTOR LESPINASSE, CORN TRADER, A.G. EDWARDS & SONS: It could be months before prices recover, maybe not until next spring the way things look currently.
EASTABROOK: That doesn`t bode well for all of the grain that is being piled on the ground because elevators have run out of storage space. Wet, warm weather could rot it. Analysts say some farmers may have to sell sooner rather than later.
JAY FITZGERALD, VICE PRESIDENT, ADVANCE TRADING: The farmers will need to sell for some financing at some point in time and a lot of times what you`ll see them do is they`ll juggle their tax years. So, I would anticipate if they`re not selling heavily this fall, we should probably see some selling in January.
EASTABROOK: Neubauer is one of the lucky farmers. He has enough storage space for his crop and is willing to wait for a turnaround in prices. Diane Eastabrook, NIGHTLY BUSINESS REPORT, Shirley, Illinois.
Nightly Business Report transcripts are available
on-line post broadcast. The program is transcribed by eMediaMillWorks.
Updates may be posted at a later date. The views of our guests
and commentators are their own and do not necessarily represent
the views of Community Television Foundation of South Florida,
Inc. Nightly Business Report, or WPBT. Information presented
on Nightly Business Report is not and should not be considered
as investment advice. Copyright (c) 2004 Community Television
Foundation of South Florida, Inc. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Terms
of use.
10/12/04:
"The Road To The White House"-Stem Cell Research
PAUL KANGAS: Three weeks from today, Americans will go to the polls to elect the next president. As Election Day draws near, the issue of embryonic stem cell research is gaining national attention. Pollsters say it`s an emotional topic that can swing voters. Tonight, the "road to the White House" takes us to Pennsylvania, where Stephanie Woods talks to people with a lot at stake in the debate.
STEPHANIE WOODS, NIGHTLY BUSINESS REPORT CORRESPONDENT: For Harry O`Neill and his daughter, Patricia, the issue of embryonic stem cell research is more than political; it`s personal. Harry has been living with Parkinson`s disease for 20 years. While he sees promise in the research, he views embryonic cells as potential life, and despite his condition, remains committed to his convictions.
HARRY O`NEILL, OPPOSES STEM CELL RESEARCH: The guy upstairs is the only guy that can pull the plug, and you have no right to pull the plug, in my book, to do research for anything, no matter what benefit is going to come out of it. You have no right to take another person`s life, and that`s it.
WOODS: Patricia sees it differently.
PATRICIA O`NEILL, SUPPORTS STEM CELL RESEARCH: The embryonic stem cells, these are (INAUDIBLE) in-vitro fertilization. These cells and eggs are donated and they`re going to be discarded otherwise, so it`s the difference between just discarding these lives or perhaps saving a life. Now I look at it, it`s not going to be done in time to help my father, but it`s going to help someone else`s father. And that`s important.
WOODS: Stem cell research has become an important issue in the presidential election, an issue where President Bush and Senator Kerry have sharp differences. President Bush has set strict limits on Federal funding of stem cell research, banning the use of embryonic cells created after August of 2001. Senator Kerry promises to lift those restrictions and increase Federal funding. In this swing state, stem cell research is not just a personal and political issue; it`s also an economic issue. Pennsylvania is home to hundreds of biotechnology and pharmaceutical companies that employ more than 80,000 people. Arthur Caplan heads the bioethics department at the University of Pennsylvania. He says the issue is key for the state.
ARTHUR CAPLAN, BIOETHICS DIRECTOR, UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA: The issue in the state is not just the ethical question of what do you want to do about an embryo? There is the financial question about, are we going to have jobs? This is a state that, if you will, is tied in very closely to health care. And I think most of the political leaders in the state, including the governor, see the biological revolution as the key to the Pennsylvania economy in the 21st century.
WOODS: Harry O`Neill says the stem cell issue is only a small factor in his decision to vote for President Bush, despite being a registered Democrat.
HARRY O`NEILL: I don`t think it`s a big issue with me politically but it is one that I would weigh heavily in the mix, as to why you`d vote for Bush and not Kerry.
WOODS: Patricia says the stem cell issue falls behind war and the economy.
PATRICIA O`NEILL: If all other things were equal, let`s say we actually had found weapons of mass destruction in Iraq and not another life has been wasted and the economy took an upswing and we added a million jobs to it, it would come down to this, if it came down to this, I would definitely vote for Kerry for this reason.
WOODS: When it come to politics, the O`Neill`s agree to disagree. And it`s those areas of disagreement both Bush and Kerry are focusing on in the final weeks of the campaign. Stephanie Woods, NIGHTLY BUSINESS REPORT, Pennsylvania.
Nightly Business Report transcripts are available
on-line post broadcast. The program is transcribed by eMediaMillWorks.
Updates may be posted at a later date. The views of our guests
and commentators are their own and do not necessarily represent
the views of Community Television Foundation of South Florida,
Inc. Nightly Business Report, or WPBT. Information presented
on Nightly Business Report is not and should not be considered
as investment advice. Copyright (c) 2004 Community Television
Foundation of South Florida, Inc. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Terms
of use.
10/12/04:
"The Big Squeeze"-Florida Citrus Goes Sour For Growers
LINDA O'BRYON: With four hurricanes in two months, Florida`s citrus growers have taken a beating from heavy winds and rain. That`s why new government forecasts show the state`s orange output will plunge by 27 percent this year. It`s just the latest problem for an industry already dealing with overseas competition and changing consumer tastes. Tonight, in the first part of a series called "the big squeeze," Jeff Yastine looks at the challenges facing Florida citrus.
JEFF YASTINE, NIGHTLY BUSINESS REPORT CORRESPONDENT: The message is loud and clear every time a citrus grower walks his grove, everywhere thousands upon thousands of oranges lying on the ground beneath the trees, a calling card of the summer`s hurricanes.
The stress and the fatigue show in the faces of the growers, men and women like these, attending a citrus industry hurricane relief workshop, all trying to outlast years of declining wholesale citrus prices which have forced people like Ron Edwards to tighten their belts.
RON EDWARDS, CEO, EVANS PROPERTIES: Just drop back and do everything as absolute low-cost as you can do it. But that`s been going on for years and there really is very little left for growers to take out of their cost structure and there are very few reserves left in an industry that`s been in a decline for 10 years, for one reason or another. So things like these storms are going to very much put some people over the top.
YASTINE: It`s the latest challenge for an agribusiness that`s been struggling in recent years. Florida citrus has lost market share to Brazil, which dominates the world market. And at the same time, an oversupply of the crop has contributed to lower prices, to the point where growers have trouble getting a fair return on their investment. The rapid rise of the low-carbohydrate diet craze, including the Atkins` diet, dealt the industry another unexpected blow. Suddenly, millions of consumers were no longer buying the not- from-concentrate orange juice that`s the backbone of Florida`s citrus industry. That drop in consumption was reflected in OJ futures prices, which fell nearly 50 percent in the past year. It took the damage from the hurricanes to finally boost prices.
ANDY LEVIGNE, CEO, FLORIDA CITRUS MUTUAL: The early season prices that we`re seeing now gets the grower back to breaking even or possibly making a little bit of money on his crop. Last year, for the most part, the prices that growers were getting for their crop was below the cost of production.
YASTINE: Usually when a product is priced below its cost, businessmen start getting out of the business and it is no different in Florida citrus. Most expect an industry shakeout, where smaller growers sell out to larger ones and others cash out through real estate development. But some growers say they`ll do what they have to, to survive these latest challenges to Florida`s citrus industry.
KEVIN BYNUM, GROWER: We`re just in it for the long term, long real estate holdings. And we`re in the business to stay, so we`ll hit the challenges straight on and we`ll just deal with them as we get them.
YASTINE: Jeff Yastine, NIGHTLY BUSINESS REPORT, Fort Pierce, Florida.
Nightly Business Report transcripts are available
on-line post broadcast. The program is transcribed by eMediaMillWorks.
Updates may be posted at a later date. The views of our guests
and commentators are their own and do not necessarily represent
the views of Community Television Foundation of South Florida,
Inc. Nightly Business Report, or WPBT. Information presented
on Nightly Business Report is not and should not be considered
as investment advice. Copyright (c) 2004 Community Television
Foundation of South Florida, Inc. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Terms
of use.
10/11/04:
"Commentary"-The Presidential Candidates & Their Tax Plans
LINDA O'BRYON: Last night`s commentator had some views on taxes from the perspective of the Bush administration. Tonight, a different view. Here`s Charles Schultze, senior fellow at the Brookings Institution.
CHARLES SCHULTZE, SENIOR FELLOW EMERITUS, BROOKINGS INSTITUTION: The core of President Bush`s economic program consists of large tax cuts, tilted towards upper-income groups and owners of capital. The rationale for such supply side tax cuts is that they increase incentives for saving, investment and work effort and over the long run, increase national income. Paid for by offsetting cuts in Federal spending, the tax cuts would spur economic growth, although much less than advertised.
But the president`s tax cuts are financed not by spending reductions, but by Federal borrowing. Because of the higher borrowing, the private saving available to finance domestic investment will be reduced. Investment will be curtailed and additional borrowing from abroad will be needed to help finance the investment that does take place. With lower investment, the growth of national income slows and more of that income has to be sent overseas to service the foreign debt.
Ten years from now, the president`s tax cuts, if made permanent as he proposes, will have raised the national debt by $3.5 to $4 trillion. The negative effects of such huge increases in debt will eventually more than counteract any positive incentive effects of the tax cuts. It would be useful to have a straightforward national debate about the merits of large supply-side tax cuts, paid for with equally large reductions in government services and some increase in economic inequality. But that`s not what we are getting. I`m Charles Schultze.
Nightly Business Report transcripts are available
on-line post broadcast. The program is transcribed by eMediaMillWorks.
Updates may be posted at a later date. The views of our guests
and commentators are their own and do not necessarily represent
the views of Community Television Foundation of South Florida,
Inc. Nightly Business Report, or WPBT. Information presented
on Nightly Business Report is not and should not be considered
as investment advice. Copyright (c) 2004 Community Television
Foundation of South Florida, Inc. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Terms
of use.
10/12/04:
Last Word: Delta Turns on the Faucet of Generousity
LINDA O'BRYON: Finally, last month a tornado spawned by hurricane Ivan blew through James Abney`s home in the Florida panhandle. Just about everything, including the kitchen sink, was destroyed, except the kitchen faucet. When people at the Delta faucet company in Indianapolis saw this Associated Press photograph of Abney`s lone faucet held up by pipes, they recognized it as one of their own, and they decided to do something to help him. This week, Delta gave Abney $10,000 towards a down payment on a new home. Abney calls the money a godsend and I`ll bet his new house will have Delta faucets this time.
KANGAS: Sounds like he`s tapped into a very decent company.
O`BRYON: And probably a liquid one.
KANGAS: I would say so. Yes.
Nightly Business Report transcripts are available
on-line post broadcast. The program is transcribed by eMediaMillWorks.
Updates may be posted at a later date. The views of our guests
and commentators are their own and do not necessarily represent
the views of Community Television Foundation of South Florida,
Inc. Nightly Business Report, or WPBT. Information presented
on Nightly Business Report is not and should not be considered
as investment advice. Copyright (c) 2004 Community Television
Foundation of South Florida, Inc. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Terms
of use.
10/12/04:
Paul Kangas' "Stocks In The News"
PAUL KANGAS: Stocks headed broadly lower this morning as oil moved above $54 per barrel. Lower earnings from Merrill Lynch and State Street also caused some of the selling. At mid-morning, the Dow was down 53 points, NASDAQ off 20. Then stocks gradually improved this afternoon, when oil fell below $53 per barrel. But the buying was tempered by caution ahead of those earnings from Intel. The Dow industrial average cut its loss to 4 3/4 points at 10,077.18. The NASDAQ was down only 3 1/2 at the close at 1925.17. Standard & Poor`s 500 down 2 1/2 points at 1121.84.
Over in the bond market, the 10-year note rose 9/32, pushing the yield down to 4.10 percent.
Followed by Calpine (CPN) $0.13 loss there.
Viacom (VIA.B) dropped $0.03.
Lucent Technologies (LU) $0.06 loss.
Merck (MRK) second day in a row on the upside, $0.11 gain, fifth in big board volume.
EMC Corp. (EMC) was down $0.31. The problem here, IBM is introducing two new storage systems designed to compete directly with EMC products and they`ll be about 1/2 of the price.
State Street Corporation (STT) down $2.69. Third quarter earnings dropped 12 percent from last year, $0.52 versus $0.60 then and Standard & Poor`s today downgraded the stock from "accumulate" to just a "hold" rating.
Citigroup (C) $0.06 loss.
Texas Instruments (TXN) off $0.59. Yesterday Deutsche Bank Securities downgraded it from "buy" to "sell."
And then General Electric (GE) tenth in volume, was up $0.02.
Johnson & Johnson (JNJ), another Dow stock, up $1.46. Third quarter earnings rose 15 percent over last year, $0.78 versus $0.69 then. That was $0.02 better than the Street estimate. The company`s worldwide sales rose a respectable 10 1/2 percent.
And then Merrill Lynch (MER) closed up $1.48. It was as low as 50 1/2 this morning after reporting an 8 percent drop in third quarter earnings, $0.93 versus $1 last year. But as it turns out, that was a penny above the Wall Street consensus and the stock rebounded.
NCR Corporation (NCR) up $3.08. Company sees third quarter earnings of $0.40 a share, double the Wall Street estimate. Company cites strong results from its data warehousing and financial self-service lines.
Gannett Company (GCI) down $1.75. Third quarter earnings $1.18, up from $1.03 last year, but that was a penny below the Street estimate.
Commscope (CTV) off $3.80. Company sees fourth quarter sales dropping 5 to 10 percent from the third quarter and the company`s going to adopt some cost cutting measures to combat that. The company makes cable products incidentally.
Oshkosh Truck Corporation (OSK) down $3.09. The company was not chosen by the United Kingdom defense ministry for its support and vehicle program lost out to another company for that big contract.
Ship Finance International (SFL) down $2.11. Smith Barney brokerage downgraded it from "hold" to a "sell."
And Worthington Industries (WOR), a manufacturer of metal products, down $0.77. On the close it was as low as $20.35. This morning after Prudential downgraded it from "neutral" to "underweight."
On the upside, Jilin Chemical Industrial (JCC), the Chinese company says preliminary estimates show nine month earnings should be up 400 to 450 percent over the previous year. What a move that would be.
Microsoft (MSFT) $0.03 loss, topped the active list.
And then Intel (INTC) down $0.33. In after hours, as you`ve heard, those better than expected revenues pushed it close to $21 a share.
Yahoo! (YHOO) closed up $0.21 after the close. Third quarter earnings $0.09, up from $0.05 last year, in line with estimates. In after hours trading, Yahoo! stock was around $34.65.
eBay (EBAY) $0.24 loss.
Google (GOOG) moved up $2.14, fifth in volume.
Cisco Systems (CSCO) an $0.18 gain.
Applied Materials (AMAT) down $0.13.
Research In Motion (RIMM) $0.83 rise.
Oracle (ORCL) down a nickel.
And Sirius Satellite Radio (SIRI) moved up $0.23 a share.
Travelzoo (TZOO) a $6.47 gain. Third quarter earnings quadrupled, $0.12, versus only $0.03 a year ago. Revenues up 99 percent, big move there.
And then D&K Healthcare Resources (DKWD) wholesale drug, down nearly $2 a share. The company is expecting a first quarter loss of $0.14 to $0.16 a share. The Wall Street estimate is for earnings of $0.02 a share.
And those are the stocks in the news tonight.
10/11/04:
Market Stats
NET PERCENT CLOSE CHANGE CHANGE
DOW CLOSE 10077.18 -4.79 - .1
HIGH 10102.33
LOW 10017.15
NASDAQ COMP. 1925.17 -3.59 -.2
HIGH 1929.98
LOW 1904.11
VOLUME 1,320.1
PREVIOUS 943.7
UP VOLUME 437.0
DOWN VOLUME 872.5
DOW TRANSPORTS 3338.98 +2.81 + .1
DOW UTILITIES 302.27 +2.10 + .7
CLOSING TICK +390
S&P 500 1121.84 -2.55 - .2
S&P 100 539.22 -.70 - .1
MIDCAP 400 592.46 -1.85 - .3
REUTERS/CRB 284.42 -3.82 - 1.3
NYSE COMPOSITE 6609.71 -33.46 - .5
VALUE LINE 360.65 -1.17 - .3
RUSSELL 2000 576.71 -.85 - .2
DJW 5000 10962.96 -22.99 - .2
U.S. TREASURIES
5-YEAR NOTE 3.375%
Oct. 15,2009 100 2/32 +7/32 + 3.36
10-YEAR NOTE 4.25%
Aug. 15,2014 101 4/32 +9/32 + 4.10
30-YEAR NOTE 5.375%
Feb. 15, 2031 107 8/32 +13/32 + 4.88
LEHMAN BROS.
LONG BOND INDEX 1762.09 +12.14
DOW CLOSE 10077.18 -4.79 - .1
ADVANCES 1558
DECLINES 1750
NEW HIGHS 91
NEW LOWS 39
NET PERCENT
NYSE MOST ACTIVES 4PM CLOSE CHANGE CHANGE
PFE Pfizer 29.86 -.45 -1.5
CPN Calpine 2.51 -.13 -4.9
VIAb Viacom "B" 34.43 -.03 -.1
LU Lucent Tech 3.38 -.06 -1.7
MRK Merck & Co 30.85 +.11 +.4
EMC EMC Corp 11.91 -.31 -2.5
STT State Street 41.16 -2.69 -6.1
C Citigroup 44.80 -.06 -.1
TXN Texas Instrument 21.30 -.59 -2.7
GE GE 34.02 +.02 +.1
NASDAQ CLOSE 1925.17 - 3.59 - .2
VOLUME 1,523.6
PREVIOUS 1,177.6
ADVANCES 1315
DECLINES 1751
NASDAQ ACTIVES
MSFT Microsoft 28.03 -.03 -.1
INTC Intel 20.28 -.33 -1.6
YHOO Yahoo! 34.23 +.21 +.6
EBAY eBay 93.49 -.24 -.3
GOOG Google 137.40 +2.14 +1.6
CSCO Cisco Systems 19.16 +.18 +1.0
AMAT Applied Matl 16.16 -.13 -.8
RIMM Rsch In Motion 76.97 +.83 +1.1
ORCL Oracle 12.15 -.05 -.4
SIRI Sirius Satellite 3.75 +.23 +6.5
AMEX CLOSE 1276.96 - 7.77 - .6
INDEX SHARES
DIA DIAMONDS TRUST 100.99 -.15 -.2
QQQ NASDAQ 100 35.74 -.01 -.0
SPY S&P DEP.RECEIPTS 112.53 -.44 -.4
STOCKS IN THE NEWS
JNJ Johnson & Johnson 56.82 +1.46 +2.6
MER Merrill Lynch 52.48 +1.48 +2.9
NCR NCR Corp 52.00 +3.08 +6.3
GCI Gannett Co 83.25 -1.75 -2.1
CTV Commscope 18.20 -3.80 -17.3
OSK Oshkosh Truck 54.45 -3.09 -5.4
SFL Ship Finance Intl 20.90 -2.11 -9.2
WOR Worthington Inds 21.05 -.77 -3.5
JCC Jilin Chemical 22.97 +1.67 +7.8
TZOO TravelZoo 63.35 +6.47 +11.4
DKHR D&K Healthcare 8.06 -1.99 -19.8
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