- California Governor and Lawmakers Reach Budget Deal
- CIT Confirms $3 Billion in Financing to Avert Bankruptcy
- Roubini: Recovery From Recession Will Be 'Very Ugly'
- Tuesday Look Ahead: Earnings May Trump Bernanke
- SEC Seeks to Rein In Stanford Receiver
- Cramer: Did FDIC Want CIT to Fail?
- Texas Instruments Profit, Outlook Top Expectations
- Productivity Booms, but Job Market Is Dismal
- Yahoo Set to Unveil New Homepage
- Jets Owner Says New Stadium Will Be Sold Out
- Toshiba Feeling the Blu's; Apple Next?
- Tech Stocks vs ETFs: Earnings Season Strategies
- CNBC’s Sports Twitter Rankings (July ’09)
- Toyota's New U.S. Boss: 'Time to Get Close to The Customer'
- Art Cashin: My Take on Goldman's S&P Call
- Lenny Dykstra, Michael Jackson, And Goldman Sachs is Running The Country - Your Emails
- Secular Bear Market For Another 10 Years: Strategist
- Lodging Losses Mount
- 2-door small cars get good marks in crash tests
- Bernanke preps for hot seat on bailouts, recovery
- Details of agreement to close California deficit
- House panel OKs new long-term care program
- Volkswagen to make new compact sedan in Mexico
- China denies links in US economic spying case
- Citigroup seizes resort where AIG held retreat
- New Barnes & Noble multi-format e-books dog Amazon
- GM has little room for error this time, exec says
Among the premarket stories for Tuesday, July 14, from AP Financial News:
HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) — Heavy equipment dealers believe the market will remain weak for the rest of the year with sales in western Europe down steeply, an analyst said as he slashed his profit estimates for Caterpillar Inc.
SEATTLE (AP) — Dell Inc. is trying to assure Wall Street analysts that the computer maker can weather the economy-driven slump in PC sales.
NEW YORK (AP) — A KeyBanc Capital Markets analyst said Callaway Golf Co. appears poised for double-digit sales declines in the third quarter but still reiterated a "Buy" rating on the company.
SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) — Intel Corp.'s second-quarter results, scheduled for after the market closes, will help illuminate how the personal computer industry is holding up in the recession amid some mixed signals about its health.



