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Good morning. Here's what you need to know.
  • Asian markets were little changed in overnight trading, with Hong Kong's Hang Seng up slightly less than 0.1 percent. European shares are modestly higher, while U.S. futures point to a higher open.
  • The Chinese service industry contracted in January, new data out of HSBC shows. The composite service purchasing index declined from 50.8 to 49.7. HSBC noted that service companies added employees at the slowest rate in three-years. 
  • Spain will allow banks to tap a government bailout facility to prompt industry consolidation and write downs on real-estate assets of €50 billion, or $66 billion.  Economic Minister Luis de Guindos announced the plan, as the country's new government attempts to revitalize Spanish capital markets. The government said the financial system was saddled with €175 billion in "problem" assets.
  • Eurozone PMI was unchanged from an earlier flash reading, registering at 50.4. A reading above 50 indicates expansion. Markit Economics said growth was fueled by Germany and France while Italy and Spain saw improvement, while remaining in decline.
  • The U.S. Senate voted overwhelmingly to ban insider trading by Congressional leaders. The decision, which was a remarkable turn for a bill that had been left for dead, came after repeated media reports last year of questionable trading by politicians. The House of Representatives is expected to put the act to a vote next week.
  • Unemployment data in the U.S. is set for release this morningEconomists polled by Bloomberg expect private payrolls to expand by 163,000 people, keeping the jobless rate flat at 8.5 percent. The announcement will be made at 8:30 a.m. 
  • Wegelin, the Swiss private wealth management firm, has been officially charged by U.S. prosecutors for allegedly aiding Americans avoid paying taxes on more than $1.2 billion in assets. The news follows criminal charges against three of its bankers earlier this year.
  • Retail sales in the U.S. were surprisingly upbeat, with the 20 retailers polled by Thomson Reuters reporting an average gain of 4.2 percent, against 2 percent forecasts. Costco, Saks Fifth Avenue and Target all beat targets set by Wall Street analysts, with Saks seeing same-store sales surging 10.5 percent in January. 
  • Earnings season continues today, although it is markedly quieter than the past few days. Clorox and Estee Lauder both report, with expectations for earnings per share of $0.69 and $1.01. Analysts will be looking to Estee Lauder to see how the global beauty business is shaping up. 
  • Panasonic announced that it expects to report a loss of ¥780 billion, or $10 billion, for its full fiscal year. That loss is nearly double a previous projection made by the company of ¥420 billion. If that number proves right, it would be the second-biggest loss for a Japanese manufacturer.