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9:45AM Stocks rallied on economic data.[/R]
U.S. stocks opened higher, extending rally on tame inflation in November and industrial production increase. The Labor Department showed that consumer prices unexpectedly came in unchanged in November. Another government report showed that industrial production rose 0.2% in November, the first increase in two months, amid increased output by automobile makers. The economic data prompted that the economy is slowing at a reasonable pace and that inflation was in check.
In early trading, significant strength emerged in the housing sector, lifted by optimism that the inflation data could lead the Fed Reserve to cut interest rates early next year. Among tech stocks, Adobe Systems (
ADBE: chart) rose 5% after it posted Q4 earnings in line with estimates, while revenue was above expectations. Ciena Corp. (
CIEN: chart) rose 4% after Deutsche Bank upgraded the stock of the telecommunications-equipment provider to buy from hold. The upgrade came a day after the company posted its first quarterly profit in five years.
Among other movers, E-Trade Financial Corp. (
ET: chart) gained 2% after it projected earnings for 2007 in line with estimates. The company also said it will move its stock market listing to Nasdaq from the NYSE. On the losers' side, Black & Decker (
BDK: chart) dropped 6% after forecasting Q4 earnings below estimates. In the first hour of trading, the Dow Jones industrial average was up 38.85, or 0.31%, at 12,455.61. The increase comes a day after the Dow rose nearly 100 points, closing above 12,400 for the first time. The Standard & Poor's 500 index was up 4.26, or 0.30%, at 1,429.75, and the Nasdaq composite index was up 13.20, or 0.54%, at 2,467.05.
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Industrial production gained 0.2% in November.[/R]
Friday morning, the Federal Reserve released its report on industrial production and capacity utilization in the month of November, showing that
industrial production increased modestly while capacity utilization came in unchanged. The report showed that industrial production rose 0.2 percent in November after a downwardly revised unchanged reading for October. Economists had expected production to come in unchanged compared to the 0.2 percent increase originally reported for the previous month. The modest increase in industrial production was partly due to an increase in manufacturing production, which rose 0.3 percent in November after falling 0.5 percent in October. A sharp rise in the production of motor vehicles and parts contributed to the increase in manufacturing production. At the same time, mining and utilities output fell 0.2 percent and 0.1 percent, respectively, with the decrease in utilities output coming after it rose 4.3 percent in October. The report also showed that the capacity utilization rate came in at 81.8 in November, unchanged from the previous month downwardly revised reading. Economists had expected capacity utilization to come in at 82.1.
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9:30AM The London benchmark index gained Friday on firmer oil stocks.[/R]
In mid-afternoon, the
FTSE 100 benchmark index traded 0.5% higher to 6,261.6 above the previous five-year high in November of 6,256.0.
Advancers
News of the OPEC plans to reduce crude production by 500,000 barrels a day boosted oil companies. BP was 0.5% higher and Royal Dutch Shell advanced 0.4 %.
As the Serious Fraud Office of the UK yielded to political pressure to end its investigation of corruption allegations focused on Saudi defence contracts and the Al Yamamah oil-for-arms contracts with BAE, the company gained 5.5 %.
The tobacco shares also increased after Gallaher confirmed its agreement to be acquired by Japan Tobacco for 11.40 pounds per share, valuing it at 7.5 billion pounds. Expectations of a wider consolidation lifted Imperial Tobacco by 0.5% and British American Tobacco by 0.7%.
Prudential benefited from Merrill Lynch decision to raise its price target on the stock. Shares in the insurer were 2.8%.
Decliners
On the opposite end was Corus declining 1.2 % on worries that Tata Steel could be about to withdraw from the bidding war for the Anglo-Dutch steelmaker, paving the way for its acquisition by CSN of Brazil.
Gallaher bucked the trend in tobacco stocks and fell 0.4%, moving toward the offer price after a stronger run in anticipation of the deal and little talk of a counter offer.
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9:00AM Stock futures advanced on tame CPI data.[/R]
Stock futures advanced Friday, lifted by tame report on consumer inflation which helped ease concerns of further interest-rate spikes. The Labor Department reported that consumer prices were flat in November, even better than the increase of 0.2% analysts had been expecting. Prices fell in the three consecutive months because of sharply lower gasoline and other energy costs. The data sent bond prices higher, and yields tumbling. The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note fell to 4.536%.
In corporate news, Apple (
AAPL: chart) said in a filing with the SEC that it is unable to file its 10-K form because of its ongoing stock option investigation. In addition, it said it will restate certain historical financial statements. Among companies in focus, Adobe Systems (
ADBE: chart) reported Q4 net earnings rise of 16% to 30 cents a share. Revenue rose to $682.2 million from $510.4 million. Analysts had forecast earnings of 33 cents a share on revenue of $671 million. Company''s shares rose 6% in pre-open trading. Again after the bell yesterday, E-Trade Financial (
ET: chart) projected earnings for 2007 coming in line with estimates. It sees earnings of $1.65 to $1.80 a share on revenue of $2.75 billion to $3 billion. The company also said it will move its stock market listing to Nasdaq from the NYSE. The stock rose 2.2% ahead of the open. S&P 500 futures shot up 6.00 points to 1,444.20 and Nasdaq 100 futures surged 20.75 points to 1,846.25. Dow industrial futures ran up 43 points to 12,552.
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Consumer price index came in flat in November.[/R]
The Department of Labor released its report on consumer prices in the month of November on Friday, showing that prices came in unchanged after showing notable decreases in the two previous months. The report showed that the
consumer price index came in unchanged in November after falling 0.5 percent in each of the two previous months. Economists had been expecting prices to edge up 0.2 percent. The unchanged reading came as the pace of decline in energy prices slowed considerably compared to the two previous months. Energy prices edged down 0.2 percent in November after falling 7.0 percent in October and 7.2 percent in September.