NEW YORK —
Stocks are opening lower on Wall Street on worries that China and Europe are in worse shape than previously thought and that Americans are spending at a slower pace.
Central banks in China and Europe took action on Thursday to bolster their flagging economies. Poor retail sales for June offset some promising job numbers from the Labor Department.
The Dow Jones industrial average is down 56 points to 12,888 in early trading Thursday. The Standard & Poor’s 500 index fell 4 points to 1,370 and the Nasdaq index gave up 2 points to 2,974.
Business
Stocks down on global worries, weak retail sales
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Markets roiled by Nikkei’s 7.3 percent slide
Financial markets around the world were roiled Thursday after Japanese stocks suffered their biggest slide since the country was hit by a devastating tsunami more than two years ago.
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BP donates $500K to Moore tornado relief effort
Oil company BP is donating $500,000 to the tornado relief effort in Moore.
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Birth control coverage up for federal appeal
In the most prominent challenge of its kind, Hobby Lobby Stores Inc. is asking a federal appeals court Thursday for an exemption from part of the federal health care law that requires it to offer employees health coverage that includes access to the morning-after pill.
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Stricken Japan nuke plant struggles to keep staff
Keeping the meltdown-stricken Fukushima nuclear plant in northeastern Japan in stable condition requires a cast of thousands. Increasingly the plant’s operator is struggling to find enough workers, a trend that many expect to worsen and hamper progress in the decades-long effort to safely decommission it.
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First Look: New Xbox elegant, but much unknown
Will gamers want One?
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Median CEO pay rises to $9.7 million in 2012
CEO pay has been going in one direction for the past three years: up.
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AAA: 31.2M drivers to take Memorial Day road trip
It’s going to be another busy Memorial Day weekend on the nation’s highways.
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Clearwire board approves higher Sprint offer
Clearwire wants to accept a richer buyout offer made by Sprint this week and is recommending that shareholders vote in favor of it.
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JPMorgan’s Dimon survives shareholder referendum
Jamie Dimon, the CEO and chairman of JPMorgan Chase, easily survived a vote Tuesday that would have called on him to give up his role as chairman of the nation’s largest bank.
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Grocery chain pushes to shift venue of breach suit
A supermarket chain wants an Illinois lawsuit related to a security breach affecting up to 2.4 million credit and debit cards of its customers moved to a federal court.
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