Stocks – Wall Street Opens Higher, Shrugging off Grim ADP Data

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Investing.com — U.S. stock markets opened on higher Wednesday, shrugging off a grim preview of what will likely be the worst U.S. labor market report in history in two days’ time.

By 9:35 AM ET (1335 GMT), the Dow Jones Industrial Average was up 122 points, or 0.5%, at 24,006 points. The S&P 500 was up 0.6% and the Nasdaq Composite was up 1.1%.

The market was untroubled by ADP (NASDAQ:ADP)’s  report that the U.S. private sector shed over 20 million jobs in April, a figure that, while grim, was roughly in line with expectations. The market has had plenty of time to adjust to such figures thanks to six weeks of staggering numbers for jobless benefit claims. Weekly figures suggest that the pace of job losses has eased in recent weeks. 

Among the layoffs announced Wednesday were 3,700 at Uber, which will take a $20 million restructuring costs. Uber (NYSE:UBER) stock fell 1.1%, while rival Lyft  (NASDAQ:LYFT) stock fell 1.8%. Both companies are ste to be sued by their home state of California for mis-classifying their drivers as contractors. 

Spirits were lifted by some better-than-expected results, albeit of differing quality. Wendy’s (NASDAQ:WEN) stock rose 6.1% after the hamburger restaurant chain showed a smart rebound in sales since states across the country started to lift lockdown restrictions. U.S. same-store sales were down only 2.1% in the week to May 3, having been down as much as 25% in April.

General Motors (NYSE:GM) also beat expectations in some key areas, notably in cash burn. Its negative cash flow of $903 million in the first quarter was substantially better than Ford’s.  GM stock rose 7.2%.

Walt Disney (NYSE:DIS) stock eked out a 0.9% gain after posting earnings that lived down to expectations after the closing bell on Tuesday, while Beyond Meat Inc (NASDAQ:BYND) stock soared 13.9% to its highest since February, after its earnings strengthened hopes that the disruption to the meat supply chain caused by the pandemic will accelerate its gains in market share. Pork and beef prices have risen sharply in recent weeks due to the closure of various meatpacking plants across the U.S., which have become hotspots for the coronavirus.

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