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Friday's big stock stories: What's likely to move the market in the next trading session

Michael M. Santiago | Getty Images

Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange during afternoon trading on September 05, 2024 in New York City.

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Here's what CNBC TV's producers were watching as the S&P 500 posted its third straight losing day and what's on the radar for the next session.

The jobs report

The airlines

  • It was a big day for some of the airlines. We'll be watching to see if optimism from JetBlue will carry through.
  • JetBlue was up 7% Thursday as it hiked revenue expectations.
  • After hours, the stock picked up another 1% as the company's third largest shareholder, Vladimir Galkin bought more shares.
  • JetBlue is 29% from the 52-week high hit back in in April. Shares remain under $6 apiece.
  • United Airlines picked up 2% on Thursday. The stock is 20% from the May high.
  • American Airlines was up 1.6%. It is 33% from the March high.
  • Delta Air Lines closed 0.5% lower Thursday. The stock is 22% from the May high.

The truckers and transports

  • CNBC TV's Frank Holland, anchor of "Worldwide Exchange" and our transports beat reporter, noted there were big losses across the board Thursday due to recent negative trends in the industry.
  • J.B. Hunt Transport Services fell 2% Thursday. It is 23% from the February high.
  • Knight-Swift Transportation tumbled 3.3% Thursday. It is down 17% from the February high.
  • Werner Enterprises dropped 2.4%. The stock is 16% from the December high.
  • Landstar lost about 2%. The stock is 10% from the December high.
  • Saia slid 4.5% Thursday. The stock is down 36% from the March high.
  • Schneider National lost nearly 2%. The stock is 8% from the September 2023 high.
  • XPO fell 9.6% Thursday. The stock is 21% from the April high.
  • Old Dominion closed lower by roughly 5%. Shares are 18% below the April high.

Berkshire Hathaway and the 9-day win streak

  • Berkshire's winning run came to an end on Thursday.
  • From Aug. 21's close — the day before Berkshire's win streak began — through Sept. 5, the company's B-shares gained 4.1%. That includes Thursday's decline. 
  • One A-share will cost you $696,160. The B-shares are valued at $464.92 apiece.

Roblox

  • Roblox CEO David Baszucki will be on "Closing Bell: Overtime" at 4 p.m. Friday.
  • The stock behind this popular gaming company was at $134 a share in the winter of 2021.
  • Roblox shares ended Thursday's trading at $43.71. The stock is 7.4% from the December high.
Copyright CNBC
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