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Stocks Move Higher; Techs Drag
Published: Monday, 19 Oct 2009 | 10:54 AM ET
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By: CNBC.com

Stocks moved higher Monday, after a wobbly start, as techs dragged but investors were optimistic about the slew of earnings ahead.

Fast fact: On this day 22 year ago was the infamous crash of 1987. If the Dow were to fall a similar percentage as it did that day, we'd be looking at a 2200 point drop.

Major U.S. Indexes
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Oil hit a new high for the year above $79 a barrel, then pulled back slightly.

The big buzz of the morning was that billionaire investor Carl Icahn has offered to underwrite a $6 billion loan to commercial lender CIT Group [CIT  Loading...      ()   ]. In a letter to CIT's  board, Icahn complained that negotiations between the company and its largest creditors have become too expensive and damaging to other bondholders.

Amgen [AMGN  Loading...      ()   ] was one of the biggest percentage decliners on the Nasdaq after the drug maker said U.S. health regulators delayed approval for its most important new drug, osteoporosis medicine denosumab.

General Electric shares [GE  Loading...      ()   ] wobbled at the open. The conglomerate and Vivendi are still $500 million apart on what Vivendi should be paid for NBC Universal, the Wall Street Journal reported this weekend. NBC Universal is the parent company of CNBC.

In the morning's earnings news, Hasbro [HAS  Loading...      ()   ] beat on earnings, helped by demand for movie-related toys, but missed on revenue

Regional bank BB&T [BBT  Loading...      ()   ] reported that third-quarter profit decreased by 56 percent, but said early indicators of problem loans were largely stable compared with the second quarter.

Shares of Eaton [ETN  Loading...      ()   ] jumped 6 percent after the diversified manufacturer report a sharp drop in profit but beat expectations and said it's seeing early signs of recovery in its markets.

Google [GOOG  Loading...      ()   ] and Motorola [MOT  Loading...      ()   ] surged after an offensive line drive of ads for their Droid phone during Sunday football. Verizon Wireless [VZ  Loading...      ()   ] will begin selling the phone Oct. 30.

The phone has gotten some rave reviews about its speed, among other things, and one analyst said "Android adoption is about to explode." But analysts said Apple has already sold so many phones, it won't be easy to pry market share away from the iPhone titan.

After the bell today, Apple [AAPL  Loading...      ()   ] reports earnings. Analysts expect the iPod maker to "handily beat" expectations amid strong margins.

We'll also get reports from Boston Scientific [BSX  Loading...      ()   ]; Texas Instruments [TXN  Loading...      ()   ].

This will be a crucial week for earnings — and the market. Strong results from companies including Alcoa [AA  Loading...      ()   ] and JPMorgan [JPM  Loading...      ()   ] gave investors cause for optimism this quarter, but if Apple, Caterpillar [CAT  Loading...      ()   ] or some of the other big names reporting this week miss, it could turn the tide.

"As we get further through the earnings season, you're seeing whisper numbers rise," Bruce Zaro, chief technical strategist at Delta Global Advisors, told Reuters. "So, if companies don't blow out earnings, their stocks are going to see a selloff."

That's exactly what happened to Goldman Sachs [GS  Loading...      ()   ] last week: After JPMorgan's stellar report, the whisper numbers crept higher. Then, when Goldman delivered a solid, but not blockbuster, report, the stock — and other financials — sold off.

So far, 79 percent of companies that have reported earnings have beat analyst estimates, according to Thomson Reuters.

At least a dozen banks report this week, including Morgan Stanley [MS  Loading...      ()   ], Wells Fargo [WFC  Loading...      ()   ] and Regions Financial [RF  Loading...      ()   ].

On the economic calendar, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke gives a speech on current economic conditions at 11 am New York time, while the National Association of Home Builders is out with its monthly sentiment index at 1 pm. Economists are looking for a slight increase to a reading of 20 for October, versus 19 in September.

— Reuters contributed to this article.

This Week:

MONDAY: Housing-market index; Earnings from Hasbro, Apple, Texas Instruments and Boston Scientific
TUESDAY: Housing starts; producer prices; Madoff sons hearing; report on college pricing; Fed's Plosser speaks; Earnings from Caterpillar, Coca-Cola, DuPont, Pfizer, United Technologies, Lockheed Martin, Regions Financial, SanDisk, Seagate, Yahoo
WEDNESDAY: Weekly mortgage apps; weekly crude inventories; Fed's beige book; Fed's Rosengren speaks; Earnings from Boeing, Eli Lilly, Wells Fargo, Altria, AMR, Continental, Morgan Stanley, USBancorp and eBay
THURSDAY: Weekly jobless claims; leading indicators; Fed's Rosengren, Lockhart and Dudley speak; Earnings from AT&T, Bristol-Myers, McDonald's, Merck, MMM, Travelers, UPS, Schering-Plough, Xerox, Amazon, AmEx, Braodcom and Capital One
FRIDAY: Fed chief Bernanke speaks; existing-home sales; Fed's Kohn speaks; Earnings from Microsoft, Honeywell and Ingersoll-Rand

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© 2009 CNBC.com
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