• US consumer spending and personal income above estimates
• Coca-Cola (KO.US) announced restructuring plan
US indices launched today's session higher continuing recent strong gains. Both Dow Jones and S&P 500 gained 0.4% while Nasdaq advanced 0.5%. Investors digest Fed's new monetary policy framework which will allow a more flexible inflation target, meaning the Fed can leave rates lower for a longer period despite rising inflation. On the data front, US consumer spending rose 1.9% in July, well above analysts’ expectations of a 1.5% increase. Personal income also surprised on the upside, rising 0.4% while Wall Street expected 0.2% drop.

Coca-Cola (KO.US) – announced a workforce restructuring plan which will include both involuntary and voluntary job cuts. Also current 17-unit business structure will be reduced to nine business units. Coca-Cola is planning to offer voluntary buyouts to 4,000 workers.

Ulta Beauty (ULTA.US) stock jumped 18% in extended trading on upbeat quarterly figures. Company earned 14 cents in the second quarter, well above analysts expectation of 6 cents per share. Company's e-commerce operations increased more than 200%, but same-store sales dropped 26.7% compared to a year ago.
Gap (GPS.US) reported a quarterly loss of 17 cents per share, smaller than the 41 cents a share loss that Wall Street had anticipated. The apparel retailer’s revenue came in above expectations. Company profited from the pandemic-related shift to casual clothing. Gap also sold face masks worth of $130 million.
HP (HP.US) rose 3% in extended trading after company posted better than expected quarterly results. The hardware company earned 49 cents a share, above market estimates of 43 cents. A spike in consumer PC demand partially offset HP’s weakness in commercial printer sales.