2012年11月9日星期五

10 Things You Need To Know Before The Opening Bell



erin heatherton
Slaven Vlasic / Getty Images
Good morning. Here's what you need to know.

  • Asian markets were down in overnight trading, with the Nikkei and the Hang Seng falling 0.9 percent. European markets are lower across the board, with Spain down 1.1 percent. Dow futures are down 37 points ahead of the U.S. trading session and S&P 500 futures are off 2.5 points.

  • China CPI inflation fell to a 33-month low in October, rising 1.7 percent year-over-year but falling 0.1 percent from September. Retail sales rose just ahead of expectations, posting 14.5 percent gains from a year ago.

  • Germany CPI came right in line with expectations, rising 2.1 percent from a year ago. France posted disappointing industrial production numbers, which showed a contraction of 2.5 percent from a year ago versus estimates of a mere 0.1 percent decline.

  • Battle lines are being drawn over the fiscal cliff in the wake of the presidential election, and both President Obama and House Speaker Boehner will hold press conferences today to address the issue. Meanwhile, there is a growing voice advocating for the president not to make a deal.


  • Groupon stock fell to all-time lows in after hours trading after reporting worse than expected earnings yesterday after the bell. Disney stock is down in the after hours/pre-market session after that company also missed earnings estimates.

  • U.S. retailer JC Penney reported a loss of $0.93 per share, missing consensus estimates of an $0.11 loss. CEO Ron Johnson said in the release that JCP is "really a tale of two companies. By far the largest part of our store is the old jcpenney, which continues to struggle and experience significant challenges as evidenced by our third quarter results."

  • The Reserve Bank of Australia trimmed its growth forecasts for the country in a new quarterly outlook released Friday to 3.0 percent from a previous range of 3.0-3.5 percent. The central bank cited a reluctance on the part of mining companies to continue investment.

  • Japan looks set to avoid its own fiscal cliff in the coming days. Citi strategists write that party leaders have "agreed in principle to pass the bill in the Lower House on November 15 and in the Upper House on November 19, and that "while there still remains some uncertainty over negotiations, we expect the bill’s approval around November 20."

  • The big economic datapoint in the U.S. today is University of Michigan Consumer Confidence, released at 9:55 AM ET. Economists expect the index to rise to 82.9 from 82.6 last month. 





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