Stocks were mixed again on Tuesday as investors reacted to a fresh batch of third-quarter earnings reports. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was slightly lower at session close, while the S&P 500 Index also dipped below the flatline and the Nasdaq Composite advanced nearly 0.2%.
Here's how the market settled on Tuesday:
S&P 500 Index
Dow Jones Industrial Average
Nasdaq Composite Index
On the Earnings Front:
General Motors
The company now expects full-year adjusted earnings before interest and taxes between $14 billion and $15 billion, in the range of $10 to $10.50 per share. GM also raised its adjusted automotive free cash flow outlook to between $12.5 billion and $13.5 billion, up from its previous guidance of $9.5 billion and $11.5 billion.
"The consumer had held up remarkably well for us," CFO Paul Jacobson said during an earnings call with analysts. "Nothing we see has changed from where we've been for the last several quarters."
3M
"Our ongoing execution positions us well to deliver a strong finish to the year," said CEO William Brown in a statement. "I am confident that our work on advancing our three priorities -- organic growth, operational excellence, and capital deployment -- will deliver long-term value creation for our shareholders."
Verizon Communications
CEO Hans Vestberg said that recent announcements including the $20 billion acquisition of Frontier Communications and a $3.3 billion to lease through of communication towers "have set Verizon up for disciplined growth, now and into the future."
Genuine Parts
"Our results were below our expectations, primarily driven by continued weakness in market conditions in Europe and our Industrial business," CEO Will Stengel said in a statement.
In the News:
Nike
For Wednesday:
Wall Street will turn its attention towards existing home sales data for September on Wednesday, alongside earnings reports from companies including Coca-Cola