Market Updates

ConocoPhillips to Buy Burlington for $30 B

Elena
12 Dec, 2005
New York City

    Merger-and-acquisiotion news predominate in Monday trading session. ConocoPhillips is in talks to acquire oil and gas producer Burlington Resources for more than $30 billion. Paramount Pictures, a unit of media conglomerate Viacom Inc., agreed to buy DreamWorks SKG Inc. in a $1.6 billion deal involving $775 million in cash and $825 million of assumed debt.

U.S. MARKET AVERAGES

U.S. stock averages advanced at opening, boosted by merger-and-acquisition activity, including a report that ConocoPhillips is in talks to buy oil and gas producer Burlington Resources Inc. for more than $30 billion. Ratings upgrades on stocks like Google Inc. also lifted sentiment.

Investors are also likely to remain cautious ahead of retail sales figures due out tomorrow and the Tuesday meeting of the U.S. Fed Reserve’s policy-setting committee. Another quarter-percentage-point rate increase is expected, but investors are mostly interested in the outlook for rates and whether the long streak of rate hikes will end soon.

Gold stocks stood out among the morning's best performers as gold continues metals rally. The gold secto climbed 3.2%, reaching a new high. Energy stocks also advanced, helped by the sharp advance in energy prices with the natural gas sector being the leader in the group, up 2.3%.

There were very few standouts to the downside in the early going. Airline stocks posted modest losses. The HMO and chemical sectors were also weak.

Movie studio Paramount Pictures, a unit of media conglomerate Viacom Inc., agreed to buy DreamWorks SKG Inc. in a $1.6 billion deal involving $775 million in cash and $825 million of assumed debt. General Electric Co.''s NBC Universal had been in talks with DreamWorks for most of this year. Viacom was up 47 cents at $34.89, and GE rose 14 cents to $35.67.

Google Inc. jumped $5.10 to $414.30 after Credit Suisse First Boston raised the company''s price target by $75 to $475, helped by forecasts for accelerating revenue in the online advertising market.

The Dow Jones industrial average was up 7.72 points, or 0.07%. The Standard & Poor''s 500 Index was up 1.32 points, or 0.10%. The technology-laced Nasdaq Composite Index was up 7.48 points, or 0.33 %.

Bond prices rose, with the yield on the 10-year Treasury note slipping to 4.52% from 4.53% late Friday.

MOVERS AND SHAKERS

ConocoPhillips ((COP)) is in talks to acquire oil and gas producer Burlington ((BR)) for more than $30 billion. The total annual revenue of thee companies would be more than $211 billion. ConocoPhillips fell 3.4%.

8x8 Inc. ((EGHT)) signed a private label agreement with BellSouth Corp ((BLS)) for 8x8 to provide technology, integration and operational services for BellSouth's digital phone service. Shares of 8x8 Inc soared to 58.4%.

Lannett Co ((LC)) received approval of its abbreviated new drug application for a generic version of Adoxa, Bradley Pharmaceuticals' anti-biotic treatment for bacterial infections, from the Food and Drug Administration. Shares of Lannett rose 11.3%.

Myogen ((MYOG)) reported positive top-line results for its Ambrisentan Phase 3 trial for pulmonary arterial hypertension, meeting the primary efficacy endpoint of improved exercise capacity, the key secondary endpoint of time to clinical worsening and several other secondary efficacy endpoints. The stock surged 39%.
INTERNATIONAL MARKET NEWS

Asian-Pacific benchmarks finished Monday session in the positive. The Nikkei soared to a new five-year-high, rising to 15,738.70 on increased confidence in financial stocks with Tokyo Stock Exchange admitting that the turbulent trading last week was due to a technical error in the trading system. Across the region, South Korea’s Kospi rose 1.2%, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng advanced 0.5%, and Australia’s All Ordinaries rose 0.6%.

European stocks advanced at mid-day dealings, buoyed by French media companies, including Vivendi Universal and gains in U.S. and Japanese markets. The German DAX 30 rose 0.7%, the French CAC 40 gained 0.6%, and London’s FTSE 100 rose 0.3%.

OIL, METALS, CURRENCIES

Crude oil prices climbed on oil depot explosion in London over the weekend and OPEC’s decision to maintain production at the highest levels. Light sweet crude for January delivery gained 55 cents to $59.94 a barrel on the Nymex. London Brent rose 55 cents to $57.86.

Gold prices pushed further up, leading metals rally for eight consecutive session on robust world demand, inflation concerns and central-bank buying. Gold in London was fixed at $537.50 per troy ounce, up from $529.30. In Zurich the precious metal rose to $538.03 from $529.45. In Hong Kong gold climbed $12.40 to close at $535.15. Silver opened at $9.15, up from $9.

The U.S. dollar traded lower against the major currencies. In European trading the euro was quoted at $1.1883, up from $1.1815. The dollar bought 120.60 yen, down from 120.64. The British pound stood at $1.7639, up from $1.7543.

EARNINGS NEWS

Ingles Markets Inc ((MKTA)), retailer, posted Q4 earnings of 39 cents a share, down from 45 cents a share in the same period last year on the absence of real estate sales in the latest quarter. Sales advanced to $590.2 million from $544.9 million.

Tutogen Medical Inc ((TTG)), maker of sterile biological implants, reported net loss for fiscal 2005 is 42 cents a share, down from net income of 9 cents in fiscal 2004 despite 9% revenue growth If not for one-time costs, the net loss would have been 21 cents a share.

Bakers Footwear Group ((BKRS)), shoe retailer''s stock, posted a Q3 loss of 17 cents a share, up from a loss of 51 cents a share in the year-ago period, missing analyst estimate of 2 cents a share. Sales for Q3 advanced 34%, while same-store sales rose 21%.

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