Crude Oil Moves Lower; Carvana Shares Surge

U.S. stocks traded higher toward the end of trading, with Dow Jones gaining more than 150 points on Thursday.

The Dow traded up 0.53% to 33,844.18 while the NASDAQ rose 0.90% to 13,223.26. The S&P 500, also rose, gaining, 0.57% to 4,291.82.

Check This Out: Top 5 Tech Stocks That You May Want To Dump In Q2

 

Leading and Lagging Sectors

  • Consumer discretionary shares jumped by 1.4% on Thursday. Meanwhile, top gainers in the sector included Carvana Co. CVNA, up 43%, and Designer Brands Inc. DBI, up 20%.
  • In trading on Thursday, real estate shares fell by 0.8%.

 

Top Headline

U.S. natural-gas supplies climbed 104 billion cubic feet last week, the EIA said.

 

Equities Trading UP

  • eXp World Holdings, Inc. EXPI shares shot up 17% to $19.50 after S&P Dow Jones Indices the company will replace Heska in the S&P Smallcap 600.
  • Shares of Carvana Co. CVNA got a boost, shooting 43% to $22.14 after the company announced an improved second quarter 2023 outlook with profits expected over $50 million.
  • Designer Brands Inc. DBI shares were also up, gaining 20% to $8.68 after the company announced a share buyback of up to $100 million, offsetting weak earnings and a guidance cut.

 

Equities Trading DOWN

  • HashiCorp, Inc. HCP shares dropped 25% to $26.06 after the company issued weak guidance and announced a workforce reduction of approximately 8%.
  • Shares of GameStop Corp. GME were down 18% to $21.46 as the company reported worse-than-expected results for its first quarter and named Ryan Cohen as executive chairman, terminating its former CEO.
  • Precipio, Inc. PRPO was down, falling 31% to $0.4701. Precipio announced pricing of $2 million registered direct offering and concurrent private placement.

Also Check This Out: Bitcoin, Ethereum Fall Following Jobless Claims Data; Kava, Lido DAO Among Top Losers

 

Commodities

In commodity news, oil traded down 1.8% to $71.23 while gold traded up 1.2% at $1,982.40.

Silver traded up 3.6% to $24.38 on Thursday while copper rose 0.9% to $3.7880.

 

Euro zone

European shares were mixed today. The eurozone’s STOXX 600 fell 0.02%, London’s FTSE 100 fell 0.32% while Spain’s IBEX 35 Index fell 0.23% The German DAX gained 0.18% French CAC 40 rose 0.27% and Italy’s FTSE MIB Index rose 0.81%.

The Eurozone economy unexpectedly contracted 0.1% on quarter during the first three months of the year, while the number of employed persons in the Eurozone increased by 0.6% from the prior quarter to 166.4 million in the first quarter.

Payroll employment in the French private sector rose by 0.4% to 21.14 million during the first quarter.

 

Asia Pacific Markets

Asian markets closed mixed on Thursday, with Japan’s Nikkei 225 dropping 0.85%, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index gaining 0.25% and China’s Shanghai Composite Index gaining 0.49%. India’s S&P BSE Sensex fell 0.47%.

The gauge for Japan's service sector sentiment rose 0.4 points from the previous month to 55.0 in May, while the country’s economy rose by 2.7% on an annualized basis in the first quarter. Japan's current account surplus widened to JPY 1,895.1 billion in April versus JPY 1,075.1 billion in the year-ago month.

The Reserve Bank of India held its benchmark policy repo unchanged at 6.5% for the second straight meeting. Australian trade surplus shrank to AUD 11.16 billion in April from AUD 14.82 billion in March.

 

Economics

  • U.S. initial jobless claims rose to 261,000 in the week ended June 3, the highest level since Oct. 2021, and above market estimates of 235,000.
  • U.S. natural-gas supplies climbed 104 billion cubic feet last week, the EIA said.

Now Read This: Wall Street's Most Accurate Analysts Say Hold These 3 Health Care Stocks With Over 3% Dividend Yields

 

COVID-19 Update

The U.S. has the highest number of coronavirus cases and deaths in the world, reporting a total of 107,162,530 cases with around 1,166,330 deaths. India confirmed a total of at least 44,992,290 cases and 531,880 deaths, while France reported over 40,105,200 COVID-19 cases with 167,420 deaths. In total, there were at least 690,061,520 cases of COVID-19 worldwide with more than 6,889,330 deaths.

Market News and Data brought to you by Benzinga APIs
Comments
Loading...
Date
ticker
name
Actual EPS
EPS Surprise
Actual Rev
Rev Surprise
Posted In:
Benzinga simplifies the market for smarter investing

Trade confidently with insights and alerts from analyst ratings, free reports and breaking news that affects the stocks you care about.

Join Now: Free!