NEW YORK — Investors coasted on Thursday, leaving stocks unchanged while they looked ahead to today for a major jobs report. U.S. government bonds hardly moved, and neither did European stocks.
The government today will release the number of jobs created in January and the unemployment rate. In December, the country added 200,000 jobs, and the rate was 8.5 percent.
The Dow Jones industrial average traded in a narrow range all day, between a gain of 25 points and a loss of 40. In the 274 trading days since the beginning of 2011, the Dow has traded in a narrower range only 25 times.
Bond traders stayed on the sidelines, too. The price of the benchmark 10-year Treasury note rose 6.2 cents for every $100 invested, and the yield inched down to 1.82 percent from 1.83 percent Wednesday.
U.S. mining stocks rose after British mining company Xstrata PLC confirmed it is in merger discussions with commodities trader Glencore International PLC. In the U.S., Newmont Mining Corp. rose 1.9 percent, Alcoa was up 2.2 percent, and iron ore and coal miner Cliffs Natural Resources Inc. rose 0.3 percent.
The deal is a signal to investors that mining companies are trading at low prices compared with the commodities they mine, said Nathan Rowader, director of investments at Forward Management in San Francisco.
Health insurer Cigna dropped 3.4 percent after its earnings fell short of expectations as it absorbed higher corporate and medical costs. Pfizer fell 0.8 percent after recalling birth-control pills.
Retailers were a patchwork of rising and falling stocks, reflecting their patchwork of January sales results. Costco and Target came in better than expected. Macy's and Dillard's fell short. Costco rose 2.8 percent, and Target rose 1.1 percent.
Gap rose 10.7 percent after revenue at its high-end Banana Republic stores rose 6 percent.
Abercrombie & Fitch Co. fell 13.8 percent to a one-year low after it said higher markdowns and cotton costs mean its adjusted fourth-quarter profit and revenue will be less than analysts had expected.
Last year, investors were so worried about a financial disaster in Europe that U.S. companies with strong earnings have been undervalued, said Tim Courtney, chief investment officer of Burns Advisory Group in Oklahoma City.
Now, he said, stock prices are catching up. The S&P is up 5.4 percent this year, the Dow 4 percent.
"Right now the market is going up just on the absence of bad news, on the absence of that worst-case scenario materializing," he said.
Stocks in Europe closed nearly flat or up slightly. Britain's FTSE 100 index rose 0.1 percent. Germany's DAX was 0.6 percent higher, and the CAC-40 in France rose 0.3 percent.
The euro was also subdued after recent gains, trading slightly lower at $1.315.
In other corporate news:
-- Green Mountain Coffee Roasters Inc., which makes Keurig cup coffee brewers, rose a hot 24 percent after it said first-quarter revenue more than doubled, margins tripled, and net income rose more than 40-fold.
-- MasterCard rose 6.7 percent after adjusted profits beat Wall Street expectations.
-- Starwood Hotels & Resorts World Inc., which operates Sheraton and Westin hotels, fell 1.6 percent after it said its fourth-quarter profit dropped 51 percent because it set aside money for an unfavorable legal decision.
Natural gas prices climbed more than 7 percent after the government said the nation's supplies shrank last week. Natural gas hit a 10-year low last month.
Benchmark crude oil fell $1.25 to end at $96.36 per barrel in New York because of weak demand.
Business
Market status quo ahead of jobs report
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Ad creates national buzz
Never Enough Auto Accessories is riding high after a U.S. Postal Service advertising campaign featured the speed shop in glossy magazines such as National Geographic, History Channel, Popular Photography and Scientific American.
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Score: Tap Employees for New Ideas
Every day, small business owners scour the internet, read business journals, and wrack their brains in search of new ideas for improving efficiency, attracting customers, and boosting the bottom line.
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Pool access for disabled is sparking controversy
The Obama administration is sidestepping an election-year confrontation with the hotel industry and other pool owners to give them more time to comply with access rules for the disabled.
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After NYC beer museum tour, hop on over to its bar
Beer was hip in New York long before hipsters were into craft brews, according to a new exhibit at the New-York Historical Society that traces the history of beer all the way back to drunken Colonial times.
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Recalls this week: Lamps, bike parts
Clip-on desk lamps and kitchen blenders are among this week's recalled products.
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Business View: To be healthy, we need to stop fraud
Medicare has been a ripe plum for picking by some of the most-sophisticated and not-so-sophisticated criminals. Because the law says that all claims must be paid to vendors in less than 30 days Medicare is based solely on trust.
Continued ... - Business Memoranda: 05/27/2012
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Business in Brief: 05/27/2012
Local executive to co-chair policy forum; Machine safety is the subject of program; Job training help is available for veterans; Retail sales down in April; outlook better; and more.
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Making the miles melt away
Judging by the sharply angled, aggressive nose on the 2013 Lexus GS, you might think this is a car that wants to bite your head off.
Continued ... - Saturday, May 26, 2012
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Small dairies fading away
The MacLaren brothers are third-generation dairy farmers, but they will likely be the last in their family. After working all their lives on the hillside farm in Vermont that their grandfather bought in 1939, they decided to call it quits, auctioning off their roughly 200 cows and equipment.
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Agriculture forum: A big year for local food in schools
With asparagus spears and rhubarb stalks poking up through the ground, many schools throughout northwest Lower Michigan are capping off a big year of celebrating and serving locally grown food.
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Futures File: Eurozone, investors troubled by Greek drama
The euro currency continued to sink this week, falling to the lowest price since 2010.
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Business in Brief: Michigan dairies show April milk increase
Milk production from Michigan dairy herds in April increased from last year.
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Council created in 2010 names members
Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack has named the members of a council created in a 2010 settlement to ensure Native American farmers and ranchers have access to Department of Agriculture programs.
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Sugar fight takes another bitter turn
The Sugar Association is accusing the makers of high fructose corn syrup of trying to candy-coat their image by calling their product a "sugar."
Continued ... - Friday, May 25, 2012
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State jobless rate drops to 8 percent
Michigan reports that the seasonally unadjusted unemployment rate dropped a full percentage point statewide and fell in all major labor markets.
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The Record: 05/25/2012
Assumed names filed in Grand Traverse County:
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Building Permits: 05/25/2012
Eastwood Custom Homes, 927 Andrew Melissa Lane, Blair Township, new home, $254,253
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Schilling's firm lays off staff
Former Boston Red Sox pitcher Curt Schilling's faltering video game company, which received a $75 million loan guarantee to move to Rhode Island in 2010, laid off its entire staff on Thursday.
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Dow wins Kuwaiti case
Dow Chemical has been awarded $2.16 billion in damages by an international arbitration court for a Kuwaiti joint venture that collapsed four years ago as the global recession took hold.
Continued ... - Thursday, May 24, 2012
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Oil below $90 for 1st time since Oct.
The price of oil dropped below $90 per barrel Wednesday, the latest milestone in a weekslong decline brought on by uncertainty surrounding economies from Europe to China.
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Scott's Harbor Grill getting new owners
Scott Neumann is selling Scott's Harbor Grill just two weeks shy of the 21st anniversary of its opening.
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Greek banks to get $23 billion
Four of Greece's leading banks are to receive a $23 billion capital injection to replenish reserves which were hit by the country's massive debt restructuring deal.
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Business in Brief: 05/24/2012
Mich. Senate OKs work-sharing bill; Feds add 2012 model year to Cruze fire probe.
Continued ... - Wednesday, May 23, 2012
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Local home sales on the rebound
Existing home sales continued to surge in the 5-county area, and sale prices also are starting to rebound.
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Ad creates national buzz


