9:00AM U.S. stock futures pointed lower amid continued subprime worries.
U.S. stock futures were indicating a lower market opening Wednesday, hurt by continued subprime loans concerns. The economic jitters were sparked yesterday by a wave of profit warnings from Home Depot (
HD) and Sears Holdings (
SHLD) along with a threat from S&P that it could downgrade credit ratings on $12 billion worth of subprime securities. Investors were also awaiting Q2 earnings releases.
There are no major economic data scheduled to be released Wednesday. Dow futures expiring in September fell 29.00, or 0.21%, to 13,556.00. The Standard & Poor's 500 futures fell 4.00, or 0.26%, to 1,516.00, and the Nasdaq 100 futures fell 9.00, or 0.45%, to 1,9838.00. In early trading Wednesday, the 10-year Treasury note's yield slipped to 5.00% from 5.03% late Tuesday.
8:30AM Asia declines with Japanese stocks lower on concern over U.S. housing market, while China rises on properties.
In
Tokyo, the market fell as investors preferred the safety of government bonds, worried by a possible slowing in the U.S. economy growth in the light of the problems U.S. housing market is experiencing. Japan''s 10-year bonds advanced the most since September. The benchmark Nikkei 225 Average Index ended 1.1% lower at 18,050. The strengthening of the yen against the dollars affected the exporters as well. Auto maker led the decliners, with Toyota shedding 1.7% and Honda sinking 1.3%.
In
Hong Kong, the market broke its six-day winning streak and declined. The Hang Seng Index lost 1.2% to end at 22,607. Large-caps China Mobile and HSBC led the declines. HSBC shed 1.5% on worries about the exposure of the bank to worsening problems in the U.S. subprime mortgage market. China Mobile slipped 0.7%.
Seoul also finished lower. The Kospi Index lost 0.2% to 1,890 as strong utility stocks could not erased losses in banks and brokerage stocks. The latter finished sharply lower as news that the government intends to lower sales commission fees of equity mutual funds in the near future. Samsung Securities declined 2.1% and Korea Exchange Bank fell 1.4%. Utility stocks outperformed the other shares on the market and gained as investors thought they were underestimated earlier. Korea Electric Power gained 2.1% and Korea Gas rose 2.4%.
In
China, the Shanghai Composite Index rallied 0.3% to end at 3,866, bucking as usual the overall trend with the other major indexes. Expectations rode high with investors that the strong yan would boost property stocks. China Vanke''s Class A shares ended 3.3% higher, Financial Street Holding gained 1.8% and China Enterprise surged 3.9%.
Sydney lost as declining base metals prices hurt mining stocks. The benchmark S&P/ASX 200 shed 0.6% to 6,325 with miners BHP Billiton dropping 1.7%, while Rio Tinto dipped 0.7% and nickel and zinc mining stocks also declined on weakness in those two metals.
8:00AM Gerdau Ameristeel agreed to buy Chaparral Steel for $4.22 billion.
Steelmaker Gerdau Ameristeel (
GNA) announced after the closing bell Tuesday that it agreed to acquire Chaparral Steel Co. in a deal worth $4.22 billion, or $86 per share. The transaction is a 14% premium over Chaparral''s closing price of $75.69 on Tuesday.
Gerdau sees the deal helping to further diversify its offerings. It is expected to create more than $55 million in annual operating savings by the end of next year. The company said it may issue equity securities after the transaction is complete with the support of majority shareholder Gerdau SA.
The transaction, which is subject to Chaparral shareholder approval, regulatory approvals and other customary closing conditions, is expected to close before the end of the year. Boards of the two companies unanimously approved the acquisition. Gerdau''s financial advisor, J.P. Morgan Securities Inc., is providing $4.6 billion in financing commitments for the transaction.
7:30AM NY – 6:30 PM Mumbai Sensex sheds 99 points after Infosys tumbles.
The
Sensex on BSE finished 99.26 points lower, or 0.66%, at 14,910.62.
The Sensex opened with a negative bias of 62 points at 14,948. The index plunged to a low of 14,830, down 180 points from the previous close in early deals. Then on strong performance of metal stocks the index bounced back into positive zone, touching an intra-day high of 15,015 in morning deals. Then it got lackluster on weak IT stocks.
Apart from the IT sector, auto and banking stocks also suffered profit taking and declined. However, cement, metal and offshore oil services firms advanced.
The market-breadth was strong, though. Out of 2,694 stocks traded on the market, 1,444 stocks advanced, 1,183 declined, and 67 were unchanged. Of the 30 stocks in the Sensex, 12 advanced, 17 declined and one remained unchanged. The turnover on BSE was Rs 5,473 crore, higher than Rs 5,111 crore on Tuesday. On NSE, the turnover was Rs 11,183 crore, compared to Rs 10,720 crore on Tuesday.