Market Updates
Modest Pre-Market Gains
Elena
16 Jan, 2007
New York City
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U.S. stock market futures traded modestly higher after the long holiday weekend. Deal news from General Electric and economic data, expected to show improving New York-area manufacturing sentiment were in focus. The market also awaited another batch of earnings reports, with Wells Fargo and Freeport McMoRan Copper and Gold on deck. Intel, which is due to release its Q4 results after the close of trade, is expected to post 25 cents a share.
[R]8:00AM U.S. stock futures traded slightly up, helped by $4.8 B acquisition deal.[/R]
U.S. stock market futures traded modestly higher after the long holiday weekend. Deal news from General Electric and economic data, expected to show improving New York-area manufacturing sentiment were in focus. On Friday, Wall Street ended higher, boosted by strength in the energy and technology sectors.
On Monday, General Electric ((GE)) agreed to acquire the aerospace business of Britain''s Smiths Group for $4.8 billion, and also agreed to a joint venture with Smiths in the area of detection. The market also awaited another batch of Q2 earnings reports, with Wells Fargo ((WFC)) and Freeport McMoRan Copper and Gold ((FCX)) on deck. Intel Corp. ((INTC)) is due to release its quarterly results after the close of trade. The world''s top chipmaker is expected to earn 25 cents per share for Q4. The chipmaker closed at $22.13 Friday. According to reports, Intel will restructure its Israeli operations and create a joint venture with STMicroelectronics ((STM)). Pfizer Inc. ((PFE)) may draw some attention on reports that CEO Jeffrey B. Kindler is about to announce several thousand job cuts. S&P 500 futures rose 2.2 points at 1,443.00 and Nasdaq 100 futures advanced 4 points at 1,866.25. Dow industrial futures rose 25 points.
[R]7:30 AM Asian shares ended lower on Tuesday on weak banks, car-makers.[/R]
Asian markets closed lower on Tuesday. The Nikkei Index in Japan ended the day 0.04% lower at 17,202. Toyota slipped 0.3% and Nissan shed 1.4%. Mizuho Financial Group edged 0.4% lower and Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group lost 0.8%.
In Hong Kong, the Hong Kong Hang Seng Index lost 0.2% to 20,028. PetroChina shed 1.4%, as some analysts downgraded their forecasts and ratings on the stock after the company reported 2006 operating data Monday. Chong Hing Bank, one of Hong Kong smallest lenders, dipped 8.9% after denying Tuesday that it was in deal talks.
South Korean Kospi Index lost 0.1% to 1,390. Korean Air declined 4.6% in heavy volume on hopes it may have to borrow between 800 billion won ($856.7 million) and one trillion won if it buys 28.4% of S-Oil. LG.Philips LCD closed up 1% after some volatility ahead of the fourth quarter results. Hyundai Motor finished 2% higher on hopes for an early settlement of a dispute with its labor union over bonus payments.
In Australia, the stock market finished flat, with afternoon weakness in resources and banks. The biggest miner in the world, BHP, fell 1.5%, with selling gaining pace in the final session. Rival Rio Tinto shed 1.4%. ANZ Bank lost 0.7% and National Australia Bank slipped 0.2%.
[R]6:30AM European shares were lower Tuesday on weak miners, oil producers.[/R]
European markets traded lower on Tuesday. In early trade, FTSE 100 in London shed 0.3% to 6,246.5, Frankfurt Xetra Dax was fractionally lower at 6,730.33, the CAC 40 in Paris was unchanged at 5,630.32.
Decliners
Xstrata shed 3% and Antofagasta lost 2.6%. Norsk Hydro, the Norwegian oil and aluminium producer, shed 1.1%. SGS, the Swiss raw materials quality controller, fell 1.1% in spite of reporting a better-than-expected 19% rise in 2006 net profit. UBS, the Swiss investment bank, downgraded the shares from buy to neutral. Oil and gas producers fell in line with crude prices. The benchmark US Nymex front month contract fell below $53 a barrel in early trade on Tuesday. Norway Statoil fell 1.5 %, while Spain’s Repsol eased 0.5%.
Advancers
Safran, aerospace group, gained 4.1% after reporting unexpectedly strong full-year sales and targeting strong growth in 2007. Beverage makers advanced after a number of upgrades in the sector. Heineken, brewer, gained 2.5% after Morgan Stanley raised its rating from equal weight to overweight. Inbev, the Belgian beermaker, rose 1.7% after Sanford C Bernstein raised its price target.
Oil and commodities
Oil prices hovered above $53 a barrel on Tuesday, under pressure from warm weather and ample supplies. In early trading in London on Tuesday, U.S. crude was 18 cents higher at $53.17, while Brent futures gained 39 cents to $53.51.
Gold declined in London on speculation of increased investor sales because of declines in commodities. Gold for immediate delivery dropped 90 cents to $625.80 an ounce while copper gained on, erasing an earlier decline. Copper for delivery in three months on the LME gained $10, or 0.2%, to $5,640 a metric ton.
Currencies
The dollar traded at 120.48 yen in early trade, from 120.50 yen late yesterday, after reaching 120.74 yen, the strongest since Dec. 12, 2005. Against the euro, it was at $1.2898, from $1.2892 on Monday. The British pound traded at $1.9648, up from $1.9643.
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