Debt-laden Greece — one of the biggest market stories of 2011 — was back to haunting U.S. markets on Monday as the deeply indebted country�s inability to reach a deal with private creditors weighed down financials and the broader indices, though many stocks rebounded by day’s end.
Bank of America (NYSE:BAC) was the biggest loser among the U.S. giants, dipping about 3%. Citigroup (NYSE:C) fell 2.1%, Wells Fargo (NYSE:WFC) lost 1.2% and JPMorgan Chase (NYSE:JPM) dropped a half-percent.
A couple other stocks in media and fast food were unable to follow the rest of the pack back off the bottom.
USA TODAY parent Gannett (NYSE:GCI) was down almost 7% after missing fourth-quarter earnings estimates, mostly related to one-time charges from writedowns and a $14.7 disability retirement package for CEO Craig Dubow. The company�s 49 cents per share in Q4 missed estimates by 19 cents and were down 32% from the year-ago period. Gannett said minus one-time charges, earnings would have been 72 cents per share.
Wendy�s (NASDAQ:WEN) fell almost 4% after reporting same-store sales were down almost 30% in the fourth quarter, though it met quarterly earnings expectations of 4 cents per share. Revenue was up about 5.6% to $615 million from the year-ago period, just inching out analyst expectations of $613 million.
Three Up- Pep Boys (NYSE:PBY): Up 23.6% ($2.85) to $14.93.
Note: Pep Boys was bought out by private investment firm The Gores Group. - Renren (NASDAQ:RENN): Up 20.2% ($1.06) to $6.31.
- Amylin Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ:AMLN): Up 17.46% ($2.12.) to $14.26.
- Hyperdynamics (NYSE:HDY): Down 22.9% (77 cents) to $2.60.
- Melco Crown Entertainment (NASDAQ:MPEL): Down 7.42% (87 cents) to $10.85.
- Staples (NASDAQ:SPLS): Down 4.9% (78 cents) to $15.23.
Kyle Woodley is the assistant editor of InvestorPlace.com. As of this writing, he did not hold a position in any of the aforementioned securities. Check out recaps from previous trading days here.
No comments:
Post a Comment