09:00AM U.S. stock futures indicated a flat start ahead of Fed’s decision.
U.S. stock futures traded near the flat line Tuesday, following a strong rally the previous session when the Dow hit a 4-year high of 286 points as investors bought financial stocks that suffered weakness in earlier hours amid worries over credit markets. Traders were cautious in pre-market hours, awaiting a Federal Reserve decision on interest rates and its view on risk after the recent troubles in credit markets.
Casino stocks were in the spotlight, with shares of Wynn Resorts (
WYNN) climbing 9.7% after the casino operator said its Q2 revenue more than doubled due to strength in Las Vegas and a new casino in Macau. Rival Harrah's Entertainment Inc. (
HET) added 1% in pre-market trading after it posted 85% profit jump in Q2, due to a strong performance in Las Vegas.
Among companies posting disappointing results, Tyco International (
TYC) reported a $3.55 billion net loss for the third quarter, due to $3.3 billion in charges. Underlying earnings beat expectations of 55 cents a share. Duke Energy (
DUK) reported a 17% drop in Q2 net profit, but beat estimates.
In economic news, productivity in the total manufacturing sector grew 1.6% in Q2, as output rose 3.5% and hours increased 1.8%. S&P 500 futures slipped 1.3 points at 1,466.40 and Nasdaq 100 futures lost 2.5 points at 1,960.00. Dow industrial futures gave up 9 points.
8:00AM Harrah’s Entertainment Q2 profit jumped 85%.
Harrah''s Entertainment Inc. (
HET) posted 85% earnings jump in Q2 to $237.5 million, or $1.25 per share, vs. $128.6 million, or 69 cents per share a year ago, boosted by strong results in Las Vegas and Atlantic City. Quarterly results beat analyst estimates of 98 cents per share.
Las Vegas revenue climbed to $922.5 million from $803.3 million, while Atlantic City revenue increased to $592.6 million from $521 million. The casino operator posted revenue increase of 14% to $2.7 billion from $2.37 billion last year.
However, adjusted results from continuing operations came in below expectations. Income from continuing operations rose to $195.5 million, or $1.03 per share, compared with $128.7 million, or 69 cents per share, a year earlier.