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Good morning. Here's what you need to know.
  • Overnight trading in Asia was mixed, with China's Shanghai SE Composite off 1.1 percent. European markets are sharply higher, while U.S. futures point to a positive open.
  • Chinese PMI rose unexpectedly as new orders surged. The purchasing managers index increased 20 basis points to 50.5 versus expectations for 49.6. However, an alternate measurement of PMI measured by HSBC fell to 48.8 for January. A reading below 50 indicates contraction.
  • The European Commission officially blocked the NYSE Deutsche Boerse merger on concerns of a "near-monopoly" in derivative trading, Bloomberg reports. The deal was valued at $9.5 billion, and both firms had recently made offers to sell other units and maintain jobs in Germany in an appeal for approval. 
  • Euro area manufacturing declined for the sixth-consecutive month, data from Markit's Eurozone Manufacturing Purchasing Managers' Index showed. The index improved to 48.8 from a 46.9 reading in December, but remained below 50. Germany and Austrian PMI's topped 51, while French PMI was down slightly to 48.5.
  • Facebook is expected to file documents to go public today, with Morgan Stanley reportedly leading the offering. Reports put a current valuation on the firm between $75 and $100 billion as the company raises some $5 billion. 
  • Mitt Romney won the Florida Republican primary by a substantial margin, taking all 50 delegates from the state in the process. With 100 percent of precincts reporting, the former Massachusetts governor took 46 percent of the vote, followed by Newt Gingrich with 32 percent of votes cast and Rick Santorum with 13 percent. Ron Paul came in fourth with 7 percent of votes. 
  • U.S. economic announcements include ISM, mortgage applications, and ADP employment change, starting at 8:00 a.m. Economists predict that employment will grow by 182,000, a decline from December's 325,000 expansion. Meanwhile, ISM manufacturing is seen advancing to 54.5 from 53.1.
  • Sony named Kazuo Hirai as its new chief executive officer, ending Howard Stringer's tenure. Hirai comes from Sony's entertainment division where he worked on the Playstation gaming business, among other devices. Stringer will continue as chairman of the board. The news comes as the company predicts a fourth year of consecutive losses. 
  • Yesterday, technology giant Amazon reported mixed results, as earnings per share beat analyst forecasts, but revenue fell far below expectations. The company reported earnings of $0.38 per share on revenue of $17.4 billion, against predictions for $0.19 per share on revenue of $18.2 billion. Amazon blamed the shortfall on weakness in video games and slowing sales in North America. 
  • Earnings season continues today, with announcements from AOL and Northrop Grumman. Analysts polled by Bloomberg forecast earnings of $0.32 per share at AOL, and $1.67 at Northrop. Eyes will be on AOL to see if CEO Tim Armstrong's bet on content through Patch and The Huffington Post is paying off.