NEW YORK —
The stock market headed higher in early trading Thursday, latching on to a piece of encouraging news about U.S. unemployment and ignoring worrisome developments in Europe.
The major stock indexes all rose, putting the market on track for its first up day this week. For the Dow Jones industrial average, its 41-point gain in early trading was a reversal from triple-digit declines on Tuesday and Wednesday.
Traders seemed to latch on to a report from the Labor Department saying that weekly applications for unemployment aid fell to their lowest level since February 2008, before the financial crisis imploded.
In early trading, the Dow was up 41 points to 13,386. The Standard & Poor’s 500 was up eight to 1,441. The Nasdaq composite index was up 19 to 3,071.
The markets shrugged off a stream of negative developments. Among them: The Commerce Department reported that foreign demand declined for American-made cars and farm goods. In Germany, economic researchers predicted the country’s growth would slow, and warned that patience for bailing out weaker European countries was evaporating. Unemployment in Greece, one of the countries surviving on bailouts, hit a record high of just more than 25 percent. And the Standard & Poor’s ratings agency late Wednesday cut its rating on Spain’s debt.
In Tokyo, where the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank were meeting, IMF chief Christine Lagarde warned that the global economic recovery is weaker than many had expected. She called for urgent action to fix Europe’s debt problems and an approaching fiscal crisis in the U.S.
U.S. Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner tried to cast a more optimistic tone. He praised European leaders for efforts to solve the debt crisis. He said the Obama administration intends to resolve the fiscal “cliff” issue before the end of the year. That’s when higher taxes and lower government spending are scheduled to kick in unless Congress can work out a compromise. “We’re going to take a run at it,” he said.
The stock market languished earlier in the week because traders were disappointed when the IMF lowered its prediction for global growth. Alcoa, the aluminum maker whose earnings report is closely watched because it’s considered the kickoff to earnings season, reported a quarterly loss late Tuesday.
Among the stocks making big moves Thursday:
—Sprint Nextel shares soared 10 percent, rising 53 cents to $5.57 following a report that the company could be bought by Softbank, a Japanese cell phone provider.
—Grocery store Safeway fell nearly 6 percent, losing 93 cents to $15.36, after reporting a lower profit margin and lower-than-expected sales at stores open at least a year.
Business
Stocks head higher, despite Europe worries
- Business
-
-
Stocks gain on reassurance from a top Fed official
Reassuring comments from a Federal Reserve official and better earnings from two big retailers helped push the stock market higher Tuesday.
-
Restaurant learns online reviews can make or break
It was the customer service disaster heard around the Internet.
-
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.
-
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.
-
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.
-
Median CEO pay rises to $9.7 million in 2012
CEO pay has been going in one direction for the past three years: up.
-
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.
-
Apple’s Cook faces Senate questions on taxes
Apple’s CEO is disputing assertions by a Senate panel that the company avoids billions of dollars in U.S. taxes by shifting profits to foreign affiliates.
-
Sprint boosts buyout offer for Clearwire
Sprint Nextel Corp. is offering 14 percent more than before for the stake in wireless data network operator Clearwire Corp. it does not already own, but a large shareholder said the offer was still inadequate.
-
Via Christi Health to cut up to 400 positions across state; Pittsburg impact uncertain
Via Christi Health announced Today that it would cut up to 400 positions within its system across the state of Kansas to compensate for financial challenges as a result of declining hospital and physician visits.
- More Business Headlines
-



