Stocks were mixed on Monday as market participants looked ahead towards another week of major earnings reports. The Dow Jones Industrial Average dipped over 50 points, while the S&P 500 Index and Nasdaq Composite added about 0.4% and 0.6%, respectively.
Here's how the market settled on Monday:
S&P 500 Index
Dow Jones Industrial Average
Nasdaq Composite Index
In the News:
Nvidia's
Spirit Airlines
Spirit said it had pre-arranged a deal with its bondholders to restructure its debts and raise funds to operate throughout the bankruptcy. The airline listed its assets and liabilities between $1 billion and $10 billion in the filing and expects to continue operations.
"The most important thing to know is that you can continue to book and fly now and in the future," CEO Ted Christie said in an open letter to customers published Monday.
Tesla
Bernstein analyst Alexia Howard wrote in a Monday note that food and beverage companies could be impacted is Robert F. Kennedy Jr. becomes the next U.S. Health and Human Services secretary.
"Mr. Kennedy expressed an interest in reducing the use of synthetic dyes (such as Red 40, Yellow 5, and Blue 1), which are already restricted in use within Europe," Howard wrote in a note to clients.
"Food and beverage companies such as PepsiCo
CVS Health
Separately, Wells Fargo analyst Stephen Baxter raised CVS Health's rating to Overweight from Equal Weight on Monday and increased the firm's price target on the consumer health chain to imply a nearly 24% upside from its Friday close, citing that CVS could benefit from President-elect Donald Trump's plans to cut regulatory policies.
"We expect a better reimbursement environment under Republicans than we have seen during the Biden Administration," Baxter wrote in a note to clients. "Rates that more closely resemble underlying trend and an absence of new headwinds would be a good start."
Looking Ahead:
Bank of America analyst Savita Subramanian raised the firm's 2025 S&P 500 Index price target to 6,000 in a late Friday note to clients.
"Overall, we see limited near-term upside to the cap-weighted S&P 500 and prefer the equal-weighted index, but our bear market signposts -- the triggers that typically precede an S&P 500 peak -- are not signaling elevated risks of an imminent bear market," Subramanian wrote.
For Tuesday:
Market participants will turn their attention towards housing data for October on Tuesday as well as earnings reports from companies including Walmart