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Market Update : 
Market Advances, Wholesale Inflation Rises
Author: 123jump.com Staff
123jump.com
Last Update: 4:55 PM EDT March 15 2007


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Market averages recovered in the afternoon trading on mergers in the US and Europe. Banking stocks index rose 0.9% after Bear Stearns said that sub-prime lending exposure is limited to 3% and profit rose 8%. CBOT Holdings Inc, WebEx Communications Inc and PHH Corp surged on buyout offers. Labor Department said the February producer-price index rose 1.3% and reported new jobless claims fell by 12,000 at the end of previous week. Cisco offers $3.2 billion for WebEx or $57 per share.

 
On the merger-and-acquisition news front, WebEx Communications (WEBX: chart) surged 24% after Cisco Systems (CSCO: chart) agreed to acquire the online meeting company in a deal worth $3.2 billion in cash, or $57 per share. That represents a 23% premium over WebEx''s closing price on Wednesday. In other deal news, IntercontinentalExchange made an unsolicited offer to merge with the parent of the Chicago Board of Trade in a deal worth $10 billion. The bid by ICE sent CBOT (BOT: chart) up 14%, while IntercontinentalExchange (ICE: chart) slipped 2.8%.

On Thursday, market favored financial shares that had recently suffered sharp declines amid worries in the subprime mortgage market. Shares of Wells Fargo & Co. (WFC: chart) gained 2.4%, Countrywide Financial Corp. (CFC: chart) climbed 5.1%. Bear Stearns Cos. (BSC: chart) traded up 2.5% after it reported better-than-expected q1 earnings. Bear expects large bulk sales of troubled mortgages to give the investment bank an opportunity to profit from the subprime crisis. In late morning trading, the Dow Jones industrial average rose 25.64, or 0.21%, to 12,159.04. The Standard & Poor''s 500 index gained 5.17, or 0.37%, to 1,392.34, and the Nasdaq composite index advanced 4.46, or 0.19%, to 2,376.20. Bonds were flat despite the high producer price index. The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note was at 4.54%, unchanged from late Wednesday.


9:45AM Wall Street opened mixed amid higher-than-expected wholesale inflation.
U.S. stocks opened mixed, reflecting higher-than-expected inflation at the wholesale level and initial jobless claims drop. Investors'' hopes of interest rate cuts dampened, as wholesale prices unexpectedly jumped 1.3% in February amid a big increase in energy prices and food costs. Even excluding food and energy prices, the core PPI rose 0.4%, double the 0.2% rise that analysts were predicting. In merger-and-acquisition news, Cisco Systems (CSCO: chart) said that it agreed to acquire the online meeting company WebEx Communications (WEBX: chart) in a deal worth $3.2 billion in cash, or 57 per share. That represents a 23% premium over WebEx''s closing price of $46.20 on Wednesday on the Nasdaq Stock Market. Shares of WebEx surged 24%, wkile Cisco lost 0.3%.

Financial shares were notable gainers in morning trading, boosted by deal news in the sector. Shares of CBOT Holdings (BOT: chart) rallied about 15% after rival InterContinental Exchange (ICE: chart) made a surprise bid to acquire the company for about $10 billion. Shares of Bear Stearns (BSC: chart) gained 1.9% after it said Q1 net income rose 8%, beating analyst expectations. Dow components J.P.Morgan d (JPM: chart) and Citigroup (C: chart) rose 1% each.

Airline stocks moved higher in early trading, with Continental Airlines shares leading advancers after J.P. Morgan upgraded the carrier''s stock to neutral. Continental Airlines (CAL: chart) rose 3.4%, Mesa Air Group (MESA: chart) shares rose 2.1%, and UAL Corp. (UAUA: chart) gained 2%. Telecoms were trading mostly lower, dragged by Sprint Nextel (S: chart), down 1.3%. AT&T (T: chart), Verizon Communications (VZ: chart) lost 0.6% each, while Juniper Networks (JNPR: chart) rose 2.3%. In the first hour of trading, the Dow Jones industrial average fell 18.42, or 0.15%, to 12,114.98. The Standard & Poor''s 500 index slipped 1.86, or 0.13%, to 1,385.31, and the Nasdaq composite index rose 2.14, or 0.09%, to 2,373.88.

Wholesale inflation jumped 1.3% on food and energy costs.
Thursday morning, the Department of Labor released its closely watched report on producer price inflation in the month of February, showing that prices rose much more than economists had expected amid a rebound in energy prices. The report showed that the producer price index rose 1.3 percent in February after an unrevised 0.6 percent decrease in January. The rise in prices came in well above economist estimates of an increase of about 0.5 percent. A rebound in energy prices contributed to the bigger than expected increase in prices, with energy prices rising 3.5 percent in February after falling 4.6 percent in January. Gasoline prices rose 5.3 percent following a 13.0 percent drop in the previous month.

The notable increase in prices was also partly due to a continued increase in food prices, which rose 1.9 percent in February following a 1.1 percent increase in January. This marked the third consecutive month that food prices rose more than 1 percent. The Labor Department also said that the core producer price index, which excludes food and energy costs, rose 0.4 percent in February after rising 0.2 percent in each of the two previous months. Economists had been expecting another 0.2 percent increase. The bigger than expected increase in prices is likely to raise some concerns about the pace of inflation, which in turn will likely offset optimism that the Federal Reserve will lower interest rates in the near future.


9:30AM London bounced back Thursday on M&A and large-cap rally.
The UK market was higher on Thursday. By mid-day, the FTSE 100 was 100 points higher at 6,101.4.

Advancers

Imperial Tobacco rallied after finally making a cash bid for Franco-Spanish rival Altadis following months of speculation. Imperial shares were 6.9% higher while BAT gained 2.2% in sympathhy and in anticipation of a consolidation in the sector.

The benchmark index was further bolstered by strong resultss from Prudential and William Morrison and confirmation from Cadbury Schweppes that it was considering a sale of its US drinks division. Cadbury shares were 5% higher. Prudential firmed 4.4 % and William Morrison was 3% higher. J Sainsbury was 4.3% higher on continued reports that the CVC consortium was close to tabling an offer for the supermarket. Mining stocks were also higher, with BHP Billiton up 4.4%.

In the mid-caps, it was another year of excellent progress for Aegis Group, 4.4% higher, on Thursday, as the media buyer posted a 16% rise in underlying pre-tax profit and added its prospects were promising.

Decliners

The only large-cap decliner was AstraZeneca, the pharmaceuticals group, down 0.2%. Also, Industrial products firm Chapelthorpe plunged by more than a fifth after it warned that the current financial year will be hit by slow trade and problems at its umbrella frames unit. Chapelthorpe was down 22.5%.


9:00AM U.S. stock futures pointed slightly higher ahead of inflation data.
U.S. stock futures traded moderately higher Thursday, taking a lift from solid gains in intraday trading yesterday that gave signals the market is on the rebound. As investors’ optimism spread across global markets, Asian and European stocks gained some ground after the steep decline in the previous session, with the Nikkei 225 bouncing back 1.1% and the FTSE 100 rising 1.2%. Traders were also eagerly awaiting core inflation data that is expected to remain subdued. Manufacturing surveys and weekly jobless claims are also due for release.

Shares of subprime mortgage lenders continued to bounce along with the overall market. Accredited Home LendeAmong (LEN: chart) climbed 19% in the pre-open. Among pre-market earnings headlights, Bear Stearns (BSC: chart)reported Q1 earnings increase to $553.7 million, or $3.82 a share, from $514.2 million, or $3.54 a share, a year earlier. The results beat analyst estimates of $3.80 a share. In corporate news, InterContinentalExchange (ICE: chart), electronic commodities trading platform, said it made an unsolicited bid to merge with CBOT Holdings (BOT: chart) in a deal that values CBOT shares at $187.34 each. That represents a 12.8% premium to CBOT''''s closing price on Wednesday. CBOT shares rose 17% in pre-open trading, while ICE shares gained 3.1. S&P 500 futures gained 2.90 points to 1,404.60 and Nasdaq 100 futures climbed 4.50 points to 1,773.00. Dow industrial futures rose 27 points to 12,276
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