
1. Moving the Markets
Stocks turned the boat around today, which entailed the Dow snapping a seven-session losing streak. The market had lost momentum over the past week, as shares have been weighed down by a fourth straight quarter of negative profit growth for the S&P 500, above-average valuations and a renewed dip in oil prices. U.S.-produced crude had tumbled more than 20% from its recent high and below $40 per barrel, before jumping back up above the $40 mark today.
Despite the recent soft patch for stocks, the Dow is down just 1.5% from its July 20 all-time high and remains up 5.1% on the year. Similarly, the S&P 500 is down less than 1% from its July 22 record and is up 5.5% in 2016.
Wall Street also got more good news on the jobs front. Private employers added 179,000 jobs in July, topping expectations and lifting hopes that the government’s July employment report set for release Friday will also come in solid.
In earnings news, Telsa Motors (TSLA) showed the continued strain of building an electric automaker with even grander ambitions, announcing second quarter losses that did not meet Wall Street expectations. The company reported losing $2.09 a share, or $293 million.




