U.S. stocks slipped in thin trading Thursday as investors turned cautious ahead of the start of the corporate earnings reporting season, amid further evidence of a global economic slowdown.

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But banking shares rose before Wells Fargo and JPMorgan report first-quarter earnings on Friday which may provide a glimpse of the health of the financial sector and economic growth early in the year.

Overall though first-quarter earnings for the S&P 500 are expected to suffer the first decline in nearly three years. John Butters, senior earnings analyst at FactSet, said that more companies are cutting earnings guidance than usual.

Health-care companies led the decline Thursday a day after U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders introduced a “Medicare for All” plan to Congress, and after the Senate Finance committee hearing on the role pharmacy benefit managers play in drug pricing. But Boeing, still battling problems with its 737 Max after two recent crashes, broke a four-day losing streak.

Ticker Security Last Change %Chg
I:DJI DOW JONES AVERAGES 26143.05 -14.11 -0.05%
SP500 S&P 500 2888.32 +0.11 +0.00%
I:COMP NASDAQ COMPOSITE INDEX 7947.359092 -16.88 -0.21%

U.S. Treasury note yields rose after data showed a strong U.S. labor market with jobless claims falling to a 49-year low.  The dollar advanced the most in more than a week, while the pound fell as Prime Minister Theresa May accepted the European Union’s offer to push the Brexit deadline out six months

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