six year old thunder fan melts down
So sad.
Markets gyrated over the course of the day as traders waited for Alcoa to kick off U.S. earnings season.
But first, the scoreboard:
Dow: 12,736, -36, -0.3%

S&P 500: 1,352, -2, -0.2%

Nasdaq: 2,932, -6, -0.2%

Here's what you need to know.

  • Before the opening bell, Kayak moved closer to publicly listing shares. The company submitted new filings to the SEC and said it would price shares between $22 and $25, raising as much as $100 million in the offering. Kayak will trade on the Nasdaq under the ticker symbol KYAK.

  • Boeing inked a deal worth as much as $7.2 billion at the Farnborough Airshow in Great Britain. Leasing company Air Lease said it would take delivery of 75 Boeing 737 MAX jets starting in 2018. The total price Air Lease will pay may be as much as 50 percent less than the list price. 


  • Markets turned negative at the open, with the Dow off as much as 2 percent over the course of the trading day. Energy prices bucked that trend, with crude trading on the NYMEX up 1.54 percent to $85.75 a barrel. Brent also rallied, but remained below $100 a barrel. 

  • France sold six-month debt at negative interest rates, following in the footsteps of Germany. France’s debt office issued €7.7 billion worth of bills maturing in October and December this year and June 2013. The shorter term three-month notes sold at -0.005 percent, while six-month bonds issued at -0.006 percent. 



  • An hour before the close, the Federal Reserve reported that consumer credit surged at the highest rate since December. Credit advanced by $17.1 billion in May, above expectations for an $8.5 billion print. April figures were also revised higher, and revolving credit improved 11.2 percent.


  • Alcoa started U.S. earnings season off with a beat, reporting quarterly results of $0.06 per share, a penny above estimates. Revenue was also stronger than forecast, at $5.96 billion.