US stocks higher as additional earnings reports to be released

Media, entertainment, health and other companies expected to report earnings this week

U.S. equity futures are pointing to gains ahead of week two of second quarter earning season reporting.

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On Wall Street on Friday, indexes stumbled while wrapping up another strong month. The S&P 500, which marked six straight month of gains, lost 0.5% to 4,395.26.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average shed 0.4% to 34,935.47. The Nasdaq composite dropped 0.7% to 14,672.68.

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Media and entertainment-related firms will be in focus, with results expected from Fox Corp., News Corp., ViacomCBS, Discovery, Dish Network, Electronic Arts, and Sinclair Broadcast to name a few.  

In addition, health care will also be in the spotlight with numbers from Eli Lilly, Amgen, CVS Health, Cigna, Cardinal Health and Moderna all on tap. 

Other companies of note reporting include GM, Uber, and Roku. 

U.S. equity futures are pointing to gains ahead of week two of second quarter earning season reporting.

Meanwhile, Asian stocks started the week higher Monday, even as China reported a slowdown in manufacturing activity and countries in the region continued to be hammered by the delta variant.

Tokyo’s Nikkei 225 jumped 1.7% to 27,742.28, while the Kospi in Seoul rose 0.1% to 3,205.43. The Hang Seng in Hong Kong advanced 0.9% to 26,189.44 after being in the red for much of the morning.

The Shanghai Composite index added 0.7% to 3,422.64, while Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 was up 1.5% at 7,501.20. The benchmark in Malaysia rose while those in Singapore and Indonesia fell.

The gains in China follow data released Saturday by the National Bureau of Statistics showing the country's official purchasing managers' index fell to 50.4 in July from 50.9 in June. Numbers above 50 indicate expansion on the 100-point scale.

On Monday, a monthly manufacturing survey issued by a business magazine, Caixin, put July's reading at 50.3. That was down from June's 51.3.

The official figure was the lowest since February 2020, when a lockdown to prevent the spread of the coronavirus was in place. Analysts had expected a smaller easing of manufacturing activity.

China is also dealing with an outbreak of the delta variant of the coronavirus, which has already been running rampant in many other Asian nations.

"None of the factors for slower manufacturing and non-manufacturing growth have gone away," Iris Pang of ING said in a report.

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"In fact, more policy directions were announced on 30 July, and they are directly from a meeting chaired by President Xi. Those policies aim at solving problems to achieve long-term economic stability, which could sacrifice short-term growth momentum," she said.

Investors are also watching a crackdown by Beijing on Chinese tech companies, even as authorities moved to soothe fears.

Games and social media giant Tencent Holding Ltd. fell 2.8% in Hong Kong on Monday. However, internet search giant Baidu Inc. was up 2.4% and e-commerce giant Alibaba Group gained 1.1%.

"Despite the long-term prospects of Chinese stocks, we think the stringency of recent regulatory actions will likely keep foreign investors on the edge for now until the sentiment starts improving," Nomura research analysts said in a note.

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In other trading, U.S. benchmark crude oil lost 98 cents to $72.97 per barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Brent crude oil declined $1.11 to $74.30.

The U.S. dollar rose to 109.69 Japanese yen from 109.62 yen on Friday. The euro advanced to $1.1878 from $1.1875.