Stocks Start Abbreviated Session On Upbeat Note
Stocks moved
higher at the start of trading on Friday, adding to the modest gains
posted in the previous session. The major averages showed notable moves
to the upside, although buying interest has waned since the open.
The major averages have not seen much follow-through on their initial upward move but remain firmly positive. The Dow is up 60.60 points or 0.5 percent at 12,897.49, the Nasdaq is up 19.36 points or 0.7 percent at 2,945.91 and the S&P 500 is up 6.69 points or 0.5 percent at 1,397.72.
The
initial strength on Wall Street came as traders continued to pick up
stocks at reduced levels following the sell-off that has been seen in
the weeks since the elections.
Positive sentiment was also
generated by a report from the Ifo Institute showing an unexpected
improvement in German business confidence in the month of November.
The headline business climate index rose to 101.4 in November from 100 in October, while economists had expected the index to fall to 99.5.
Investors
are also keeping an eye on developments in the retail sector,
attempting to gauge the strength of the holiday shopping season on
reports regarding the Black Friday crowds.
A number of retailers
opened their doors even earlier than usual this year in order to
increase sales on what is already one of the busiest shopping days of
the year.
Trading activity is likely to be subdued, however, as
many traders remain away from their desks following the Thanksgiving Day
holiday on Thursday. The abbreviated trading session, which ends at 1
pm ET, is also likely to lead to light volume.
Nonetheless,
significant strength has emerged among networking stocks, as reflected
by the 2.8 percent gain being posted by the NYSE Arca Networking Index. Alcatel-Lucent (ALU) has helped to lead the sector higher, surging up by 14.5 percent.
Tobacco, semiconductor, and computer hardware stocks are also seeing early strength, while most of the major sectors are showing only modest moves.
In overseas trading, stock markets
across the Asia-Pacific region closed mostly higher on Friday, although
the Japanese market was closed for a public holiday. Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index and China's Shanghai Composite Index advanced by 0.8 percent and 0.6 percent, respectively.
The major European markets have also moved to the upside. While the German DAX Index has risen by 0.6 percent, the U.K.'s FTSE 100 Index and the French CAC 40 Index are both up by 0.4 percent.
In the bond market, treasuries are
showing a lack of direction after trending lower over the past few
days. The yield on the benchmark ten-year note is unchanged at 1.687
percent.
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TSX Flat At Open Friday
Bay Street stocks were
little changed at open Friday as gauges of most sectors were stuck in
the mud, resulting in a modest gain for Toronto's main index. The
S&P/TSX Composite Index edged up 9.89 points or 0.08 percent to
12,162.99.
Among base-metals stocks, First Quantum Minerals and Inmet Mining were adding around 1 percent each, while Teck Resources was slipping 0.50 percent.
Among gold plays, Allied Nevada Gold and Yamana Gold were up nearly 2 percent each.
In the oil patch, Bonterra Energy rose close to 1 percent.
Oil
transportation company Enbridge Inc. added about 1 percent after it
said that its subsidiary, Enbridge Pipelines Inc., has reached agreement
with shippers on the terms of a $1.8 billion expansion of its mainline
system between Edmonton and Hardisty, Alberta.
On the other hand, Cenovus Energy, Husky Energy and Vermilion Energy were down around 1 percent each.
Meanwhile, Research In Motion was paring its previous session's large gains, shedding 4 percent.
The price of crude oil was moving higher Friday morning, amid thin volumes, as traders shift their focus to EU meeting in Brussels. Further, trading volumes were
very low as U.S. market participants still out for the Thanksgiving
holiday. Crude for January edged up $1.22 to $86.67 a barrel.
The price of gold was
steady Friday morning amid speculation that a bailout deal for Greece
was imminent. Gold for December delivery added $3.50 to $1,731.70 an
ounce.
In corporate news from Canada, oil transportation
company Enbridge Inc. said that its subsidiary, Enbridge Pipelines Inc.,
has reached agreement with shippers on the terms of a $1.8 billion
expansion of its mainline system between Edmonton and Hardisty, Alberta.
In economic news, Statistics Canada
said consumer prices rose 1.2 percent year-over-year in October,
matching the increases in August and September. Energy prices rose at a
slower year-over-year rate in October compared with September, while air
transportation, food purchased from stores and property taxes posted
larger price gains. Economists expected inflation to come in at 1.1
percent. On a seasonally adjusted monthly basis, the CPI increased 0.3
percent in October, after rising 0.2 percent in September. Meanwhile,
The Bank of Canada's core index rose 1.3 percent in the 12 months to
October, matching the increase in September.
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European Markets Seek Direction
The European markets are
trading on a lackluster note on Friday, amid indications that the EU
meeting in Brussels on the region's long-term budget may not reach a
deal due to disagreement among member states.
"Positions are
quite far apart," German Chancellor Angela Merkel told reporters after
the first session of the meeting on Thursday. There should be some
progress, but may need to push the talks further to a second stage for a
final agreement, Merkel said.
French President Francois Hollande said it is more likely that the meeting will not reach a deal on Friday.
The German business confidence improved unexpectedly in November, survey results from the Ifo Institute revealed. The headline business
climate index rose to 101.4 in November from 100 in the previous month,
reports said. Economists expected the reading to fall to 99.5.
The
German economy expanded in the third quarter of 2012 in line with the
preliminary estimates, largely supported by foreign demand as well as
domestic consumption, a detailed report from the Federal Statistical
Office showed.
France's business confidence improved more than
economists expected in November, but the overall industrial economic
situation remained negatively oriented, data from Insee showed. The
headline business confidence index rose to 88 from 85 in October.
Economists were looking for a rise to 87.
IHS Global Insight Chief UK and European Economist Howard Archer
has said that the renewed deterioration in Eurozone's consumer
confidence adds to concerns that the region's economy is likely heading
for a deeper contraction in the fourth quarter.
The Euro Stoxx 50 index of eurozone bluechip stocks is losing 0.25 percent, while the Stoxx Europe 50 index, which includes some major U.K. Companies, is falling 0.05 percent.
The German DAX and the French CAC 40 are losing around 0.1 percent each. The UK's FTSE 100 is gaining 0.1 percent while the Swiss Market Index is advancing 0.2 percent.
In Frankfurt, SMA Solar is gaining 1.2 percent. The stock was raised to ''Neutral'' from ''Underweight'' at HSBC. Commerzbank is declining 2.8 percent. Utilities EON and RWE are dropping 2.2 percent and 1.6 percent, respectively. Infineon Technologies is falling 1.4 percent after a broker downgrade. Nomura cut Metro to ''Neutral'' from ''Buy.'' The stock is down 1.7 percent. Fraport is falling 2.7 percent. HSBC cut the stock to "Underweight'' from ''Neutral.''
In Paris, EADS is falling 2.1 percent on reports that Germany will buy the company's shares from France. Grocery retailer Carrefour is dropping 2 percent and France Telecom is falling 1.2 percent. Berenberg cut Danone to ''Sell'' from ''Hold.'' The stock is unchanged.
On the gaining side is EDF, which is rising 3 percent. Cement giant Lafarge and carmaker Renault are advancing 1.3 percent and 0.7 percent, respectively.
In London, Hotels and pubs operator Fuller, Smith & Turner reported
increases in profit and revenue for the first half of the year, and
hiked its dividend. The stock is gaining around 1 percent.
Sweett Group
is surging 10 percent. The property and infrastructure professional
services firm reported a turnaround to profit in its first half, helped
by disposal of investments.
Bucking the trend, Wm Morrison Supermarkets is declining 1.7 percent and Polymetal International is dropping 1.5 percent.
Ahold, which received a broker upgrade, is gaining 2 percent in Amsterdam. Outotec is surging 6.2 percent in Helsinki on robust outlook.
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Asian Stocks Broadly Higher On Greek Optimism
Asian stocks
rose broadly on Friday, as underlying sentiment remained slightly
positive after EU officials expressed confidence that an agreement could
be reached on Greek aid at next Monday's meeting in Brussels.
German
Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble reiterated his resistance to any
haircut on Greek debt, suggesting that such action toward any debt held
by the public sector would lead to nowhere. E.U. economics commissioner
Olli Rehn also told the European Parliament that he saw no reason why
Eurozone national governments cannot conclude an accord on releasing
funds to Greece.
Trading activity remained relatively subdued on
the eve of the Thanksgiving holiday in the U.S. and Labor Thanksgiving
Day in Japan.
China's Shanghai Composite index rose 0.6 percent and Hong Kong's Hang Seng
index extended gains for a third consecutive session to end up 0.8
percent, driven by talk of reforms to deepen social and economic
development and avoid the economic stagnation associated with
middle-income countries.
Chinese vice Premier Li Keqiang,
also a member of the Standing Committee of the Political Bureau of the
Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee, pledged to deepen
reforms, calling for pioneering measures and a bigger role for the
market amid medium-speed growth in the long term.
Australian
shares pared early losses to end on a flat note as investors remained
on the sidelines amid lack of trading cues from the U.S. and Japanese
markets. Both the benchmark S&P/ASX 200 and the broader All
Ordinaries index ended marginally lower at 4,413 and 4,431,
respectively.
Miners ended mixed, with BHP and Rio Tinto
rising about 0.2 percent each and gold miner Newcrest edging up
marginally, while Fortescue, which has had its East Pilbara iron ore
operations caught in disputes over conflicting information, tumbled 3.2
percent.
Ausdrill shares slumped 15 percent after the
mining company issued a profit warning, citing a slowdown of activity in
the iron ore and coal sectors as well as a slowdown of operations in
Burkina Faso. Rare-earth producer Lynas soared 6.7 percent on a
brokerage upgrade. Among the major banks, NAB edged down marginally and ANZ fell 0.6 percent, but Commonwealth and Westpac added about half a percent each.
Seoul shares
rose notably, led by heavyweight Samsung Electronics ahead of the
year-end shopping season. The benchmark Kospi average rose 0.6 percent
to end above the 1,900 level for the first time in nearly two weeks.
Shares of Samsung closed up 1.4 percent at a record high after ratings agency Fitch cut the debt ratings of Japanese consumer electronics makers Sony Corp and Panasonic Corp to "junk" status, citing their weak balance sheets and fierce competition from Korean rivals Samsung and LG Electronics.
New Zealand shares rose, lifting the benchmark NZX-50
index up 0.3 percent above the 4000 level. Fletcher Building, the
nation's largest construction company, rose 1.9 percent, extending
recent gains, retailers Hallenstein Glasson Holdings and Pumpkin Patch gained about 2 percent each, telephone network utility Chorus added 1.5 percent and Xero, the cloud accounting platform maker, advanced 1.4 percent, while Precinct Properties fell 2.5 percent after losing a contract to lease up to 60,000 square meters of office space to government.
Warehouse Group
added 1.3 percent after the country's biggest listed retailer
reiterated its earnings forecast for the current financial year, citing
signs of growth in consumer spending.
Elsewhere, India's benchmark Sensex was last moving down half a percent after uproar over the issue of foreign investment in multi-brand retail in the Lok Sabha forced the Speaker to adjourn the House for the second day in a row, till Monday.
Indonesia's Jakarta Composite index was up 0.3 percent, while key benchmark indexes in Singapore and Malaysia were subdued. The Taiwan Weighted
average climbed 3.1 percent after media reports said the island's
finance minister has asked government-controlled funds to buy equities
at lows.
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Gold Steady On Euro Zone Hopes
The price of gold was steady Friday morning amid speculation that a bailout deal for Greece was imminent.
Gold
for December delivery, the most actively traded contract, added $5.40
to $1.733.60 an ounce. Holdings of SPDR Gold Trust, the world's largest
gold-backed exchange-traded fund, were unchanged at 1,342.20 tons.
Meanwhile, the U.S. dollar
was extending its 3-week low versus the euro, while moving higher
against sterling. The buck was hovering around its 7-month high versus
the yen and flat against the Swiss franc.
In economic news from
the euro zone, German business confidence improved unexpectedly in
November, the latest survey results released by the Ifo Institute
showed. The headline business climate index rose to 101.4 in November
from 100 in the previous month, reports said, citing the survey results.
Economists expected the reading to fall to 99.5.
Meanwhile, a detailed report from the Federal Statistical Office
showed that the German economy expanded in the third quarter of 2012 in
line with the preliminary estimates, largely supported by foreign
demand as well as domestic consumption.
The prices of silver and platinum were flat in morning deals.
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