Wall Street looked set to
start the week on an upbeat note on Monday, as investors hoped for progress in
resolving the U.S.-China trade war, but a fall in Boeing’s shares kept a lid on
early gains.

Chinese Vice Premier Liu He said on Saturday that Beijing would
work with
Washington to address core concerns, adding to optimism from
President Donald Trump’s comments on Friday that he expected a trade deal to be
signed by mid-November.
Microsoft Corp rose 0.8% in premarket trading after German
business software group SAP said it had signed a three-year cloud
partnership with the company.
However, Boeing Co was set to extend a slide from the previous
session as two brokerages downgraded the stock after leaked messages from a
former test pilot showed he might have unintentionally misled regulators about
the safety of the grounded 737 MAX jet.
Shares of the planemaker fell nearly 2%.
Wall Street has been steadily recovering after a rough start to
the month on signs of progress in talks between the world’s two largest
economies.
The benchmark S&P 500 index ended Friday with its second weekly gain,
while the Nasdaq rose for three weeks in a row.
At 7:19 a.m. ET, Dow e-minis 1YMcv1 were up 29 points, or 0.11%.
S&P 500 e-minis EScv1 were up 6.25 points, or 0.21% and Nasdaq 100 e-minis
NQcv1 were up 21 points, or 0.27%.
Investors are now gearing up for another batch
of reports after a strong start to the third-quarter earnings season last week,
with big technology companies including Microsoft Corp and Intel Corp set to report their earnings this week.
Analysts project S&P 500 earnings dropping 3.1%, compared
with a year earlier, marking the first contraction since 2016, according to
Refinitiv data.
But of the 73 companies that have reported results so far,
nearly 84% have topped analysts’ estimates.
Oilfield services provider Halliburton Co dipped 0.4% after reporting a 32% slump in
third-quarter profit, hit by a slowdown in shale drilling in North America, its
biggest market.
Drug distributors Cardinal Health Inc fell 3% and McKesson Corp slipped 4.1%, ahead of a trial over the U.S.
opioid epidemic after drug companies and local governments failed to reach a
settlement on Friday.
- Reuters
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