U.S. MARKET AVERAGES
U.S. stocks opened flat supported by the world's largest automaker, General Motors Corp which advanced after announcing a restructuring plan. As little corporate or economic news is expected throughout the week, stocks will be largely controlled by market sentiment. Light volume trading is anticipated during this holiday-shortened week as U.S. stock markets will be closed on Thursday in observance of Thanksgiving holiday and will close early at 1 p.m. on Friday.
Technology sector is a notable market drag. The software sector is lower by about 1.1% and the disk drive sector is showing a loss of nearly 1%.
SanDisk (
SNDK: chart) is leading the decline among the disk drive stocks, falling by nearly 6% after
Apple (
AAPL: chart) revealed that it will use other flash memory vendors for its iPod products.
The gold sector is moving higher in early going, climbing by 2.3% and extending last-week gains, including 7% advance on Wednesday. Energy stocks are also posting gains on the back of rising oil prices. The oil sector is currently posting a gain of a little less than 1%.
Airline stocks are pressured by the prospect of higher fuel prices.
SkyWest (
SKYW: chart), which filed a registration statement last Friday for a proposed offering of 4 million shares, is the worst performer in the group, falling by 4.7%.
Continental (
CAL: chart) is showing a loss of just over 3%.
In corporate news,
Campbell Soup Co. (
CPB: chart) reported adjusted first quarter earnings per share rose 7% and that it will buy back $600 million in stock. Plane maker
Boeing (
BA: chart), which announced $4.6 billion worth of 787 midsized aircraft sales to leasing buyers. J.P. Morgan Securities downgraded the athletic shoe maker
NIKE Inc (
NKE: chart) to ‘neutral’ from ‘overweight’ and the company’s share are expected to fall.
MOVERS AND SHAKERS
General Motors (
GM: chart) announced a plan to eliminate 30,000 manufacturing positions from 2005 through 2008 in order to reduce its assembly capacity in North America. The company expects to reduce capacity by an additional 1 million units by the end of 2008, bringing its target down to 4.2 million units, a level that would represent a 30% decrease from 2002 levels. Company’s stock climbed 1.6%
Boeing (
BBA: chart) received a $780-million order for six 787-8 Dreamliners from Low-Cost Aircraft Leasing. The company said that deliveries are set to begin in September 2009. Boeing’s shares rose 1.5%.
Viragen (
VRA: chart) released initial studies of its Multiferon treatment that showed significant antiviral activity against the H5N1 strain of the avian flu virus. The early-stage in vitro studies found Multiferon to be significantly more active against the virus than recombinant alpha interferon, recombinant beta interferon or ribavirin, the Plantation. The stock jumped 12.3%.
ECONOMIC NEWS
The Conference Board released its report on
leading economic indicators in the month of October on Monday, showing that its index of leading indicators rose in line with economist estimates.
The report showed that the leading index rose 0.9 percent in October, offsetting the 0.8 percent decrease seen in September. Economic had been expecting the index to increase by 0.9 percent.
The Conference Board said that the increase by the index reflected fewer initial jobless claims and an increase in average weekly hours in manufacturing.
The report also showed that the coincident index increased 0.1 percent in October following a 0.3 percent increase in September. The lagging index increased 0.8 percent in October.
INTERNATIONAL MARKET NEWS
Asian-Pacific benchmarks finished mixed on continuous decline of oil prices and solid U.S. markets gains Friday. In early trading the Nikkei hit a five-year high of over 14,800 to close up 0.4%, led by technology and automakers stocks, also supported by stronger dollar. Across the region, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng finished flat, South Korea’s Kospi fell 0.3%, and Singapore straits Times lost 0.5%.
European markets largely gained at midday, reflecting higher close of U.S. markets Friday and strong resources sector. Gains were limited by British drug maker GlaxosmithKline, which fell 0.4% on new labels for its asthma drugs, proposed by the FDA. The German DAX 30 added 0.2%, CAC 40 gained 0.2%, and London’s FTSE inched down 0.1%. The euro rose to $1.1818.
OIL, METALS, CURRENCIES
Crude oil prices advanced on snowy weather forecast. Light sweet crude for January delivery rose 66 cents to $57.87 a barrel. Heating oil rose 4 cents to $1.7337 a gallon. Gasoline added 2 cents to $1.4811. Natural gas gained 11 cents to $11.520 per 1,000 cubic feet. London Brent advanced 63 cents to $55.53.
European
Gold hovered round an 18-year high, climbing close to $500 on renewed investor interest as rally in precious metal continues. In London the precious metal was fixed at $488 per troy ounce, up from $484.70. In Zurich gold advanced to $489.55 from $486.25. In Hong Kong gold fell $3.50 to close at $484.95. Silver traded at $8.10, up from $7.73.
The U.S. dollar lost ground against most major currencies. The euro was quoted at $1.1812, up from $1.1764. The dollar bought 118.86 yen, down from 119.15. The British pound traded at $1.7186, up from $1.7169.