After Hours Gainers:
Companies trading higher in after hours in reaction to news: AMGN +0.3% (presented additional findings from its exploratory Phase 2 trial of romosozumab: results showed increased estimated bone strength at the spine and hip; announced positive long-term results from Phase 3 FREEDOM study of Prolia (denosumab) in patients with osteoporosis)
After Hours Losers:
Companies trading lower in after hours in reaction to earnings: FMC -9.4%, R -7.5%
Companies trading lower in after hours in reaction to news: COLL -9.2% (announced the FDA will not be able to complete its review of the New Drug Application for Xtampza by the PDUFA date of October 12, 2015), FIG -5.3% (Bloomberg reporting co is planning on closing macro Michael Novogratz hedge fund), JBLU -2.4% (reported September traffic: increase in RPMs of 13.3% Y/Y to ~3.09 bln, on a capacity increase of 13.1%), SKYW -0.6% (reported September 2015 block hours decreased 11.5% from prior year to 162,742)
The stock market began the trading week on a sleepy note with a Monday session that saw the S&P 500 bounce around an eight-point range. The benchmark index settled higher by 0.1% while the Nasdaq Composite (+0.2%) outperformed slightly.
With the bond market closed for Columbus Day, a fair share of participants elected to forego the Monday session. The subdued activity was highlighted by below-average trading volume as fewer than 700 million shares changed hands at the NYSE floor.
Eight sectors finished the day with gains while commodity-sensitive energy (-1.1%) and materials (-0.9%) underperformed throughout the session. The energy sector finished at the bottom of the leaderboard, narrowing its October gain to 10.9% while crude oil surrendered 5.2% to settle at $47.19/bbl. Similar to the sector, WTI crude continues holding a solid month-to-date gain (+4.7%) despite today's dive.
Staying on the cyclical side, the consumer discretionary space (+0.5%) displayed relative strength since the start while the remaining growth-sensitive groups spent the day closer to their flat lines. Homebuilders contributed to the strength in the discretionary space with iShares Dow Jones US Home Construction ETF (ITB 27.94, +0.09) climbing 0.3%.
Elsewhere, the top-weighted technology sector (+0.2%) hovered just above its flat line throughout the day. Large sector components like Apple (AAPL 111.58, -0.54), Microsoft (MSFT 47.00, -0.11), Alphabet (GOOGL 676.43, +5.19), and Facebook (FB 94.26, +1.02) traded in mixed fashion while EMC (EMC 28.35, +0.49) spiked 1.8% after agreeing to be acquired by Dell for $67 billion in cash and stock.
Moving to the countercyclical side, consumer staples (+0.2%) and utilities (+0.9%) held gains throughout the day while the health care sector (+0.2%) eked out a slim advance despite a 7.8% slide in the shares of Eli Lilly (LLY 79.44, -6.70) after the company halted the development of a cholesterol drug.
Investors did not receive any economic data today, but tomorrow, the Treasury Budget for September will be reported at 14:00 ET (consensus $95.00 billion).
- Nasdaq Composite +2.2% YTD
- S&P 500 -2.0% YTD
- Dow Jones Industrial Average -3.9% YTD
- Russell 2000 -3.4% YTD