- 123jump.com Staff
- 09 Jan, 2008
- New York City
The Japanese indices lost in the morning trading affected by the overnight U.S. declines, but in the afternoon session investors resumed hunting for bargain buys. In late Tokyo trading, the dollar advanced to mid 109-yen levels. Nikkei 225 bucked a 0.2% decline by mid-day slump to close up 0.49% or 70.49 to 14,599.16, while the broader Topix Index soared 19.26 to 1,422.32.
- Elena
- 12 Apr, 2007
- New York City
The biggest food and drink company in the World Nestle announced Thursday that it agreed to buy Gerber Products from pharmaceutical maker Novartis in a deal valued at $5.5 billion. Gerber is the leading company in the U.S. baby-food market with a 79% share. The acquisition will help the company''s nutrition business generate annual sales of close to $8.2 billion. The deal is expected to be completed during the second half of 2007.
- Ivaylo
- 12 Apr, 2007
- New York City
The benchmark index opened with a negative bias and soon plunged to an intraday low, but steady buying in Bajaj Auto and Infosys helped to market to recoup losses in late noon deals. Then trading was subdued and the Sensex ended with a loss. Bajaj Auto and Infosys led the advancers, while ONGC and Tata Steel performed the worst. Industrial production advanced 11% in February 2007 from a year earlier, slightly lower than upwardly revised annual growth of 11.4% in January 2007.
- Ivaylo
- 12 Apr, 2007
- New York City
European markets declined on Thursday after an overnight drop on Wall Street in response to hints from the Federal Reserve at the possible need for further US interest rate hikes. US stocks dipped on Wednesday as minutes from the Fed
- Ivaylo
- 12 Apr, 2007
- New York City
Copper futures gained once again Wednesday, supported by ongoing demand from China. In precious metals trading, gold ended nearly unchanged, and silver ended slightly lower. Platinum and palladium finished higher with help from fund buying. In Nymex energy trading, crude oil futures gained, but contracts for deferred delivery settled lower after the Energy Information Administration posted a mixed inventory report.
- 123jump.com Staff
- 11 Apr, 2007
- New York City
Stocks tumbled as minutes of the latest Federal Reserve policy meeting showed continued concern about inflation and U.S. realtors forecast a slump in home sales. The Fed officials worried that interest rates hikes may be needed to curb inflation. A strong profit report from blue-chip Alcoa, which kicked off the earnings season, failed to overcome the bearish sentiment. Citigroup fell 1.6%, Wal-Mart down 1.7%, Disney fell 1.7%, and Honeywell closed down 1.6%.
- 123jump.com Staff
- 11 Apr, 2007
- New York City
U.S. stocks stumbled after minutes from the Federal Reserve''s most recent meeting said more interest rate hikes might be necessary to curb inflation. Benihana climbed 5.9%. Manor Care gained 9% after the operator of nursing homes and rehabilitation centers announced it hired JPMorgan to explore strategic alternatives. Chicos rose 7% on 5% rise in same-store sales.
- Elena
- 11 Apr, 2007
- New York City
European stock markets finished in the red on Thursday, pressured by cautiousness on Wall Street ahead of a speech by Fed Reserve Chairman Bernanke. European metals stocks traded mixed, with mining giants Rio Tinto and BHP Billiton losing ground but Xstrata rising 0.8%. Oil companies helped to limit losses, as oil prices kept above $61 a barrel. BP added 0.9%, Total gained 0.7%, Repsol shares rose 1.1%. The U.K.''s FTSE 100 lost 0.1%, the German DAX 30 lost 0.2%, the French CAC 40 fell 0.3%.
- Elena
- 11 Apr, 2007
- New York City
U.S. stock market averages moved further to the downside after the U.S. government reported the ninth straight weekly drop in the nation''s gasoline inventories, raising concerns about supplies ahead of the peak driving season. The energy report sent the Dow Jones nearly 80 points lower. General Motors dropped 2.2%, IBM fell 1.3%, Caterpillar lost 1.1%, Citigroup declined 1.8%, and Dupont was down 1%. Housing, biotech and health insurance stocks showed weakness, while gold stocks advanced.
- Elena
- 11 Apr, 2007
- New York City
Among notable movers, Biolase Technology, dental and cosmetic laser maker, warned it will post a Q1 loss and lower-than-expected revenue. Company''s shares tumbled 24%. American Medical dropped 13.3% after the company said it will miss its Q1 revenue forecast due to supply chain problems.
- Elena
- 11 Apr, 2007
- New York City
U.S. stock markets opened in the negative, as cautiousness ahead of a speech by Fed Reserve Chairman Bernanke and the release of the FOMC minutes offset the positive sentiment, generated by upbeat earnings from Alcoa and job cuts at Citigroup. Alcoa shares rose 1.4% after it posted a 9% rise in Q1 profits and an upbeat outlook for the year. Citigroup lost 1% after it announced plans to reduce 17,000 jobs worldwide.
- Ivaylo
- 11 Apr, 2007
- New York City
London equities moved higher in mid-day trade on Wednesday, with Marks & Spencer the latest retailer to advance on bid speculation, involving a private equity. The developments occurred as investors continued to believe the CVC-led consortium bidding for J Sainsbury was unravelling. Miner Xstrata also surged. The FTSE 100 was 0.2 5 higher at 6,432.6, an advance of 15 points.
- Ivaylo
- 11 Apr, 2007
- New York City
Asian markets finished mostly higher, as bargain-hunting powered the advance in Japan, while strong earnings expectations buoyed South Korean benchmark index to a record high. Japanese stocks were led by selected electronics and pharmaceutical issues, as a weaker yen and firm U.S. shares overnight boosted sentiment. Hong Kong closed with a fifth straight session of gains lifted by large-cap rally.
- Elena
- 11 Apr, 2007
- New York City
Wall Street looked poised for higher opening on Wednesday before the release of last FOMC minutes. The pre-market sentiment was boosted by better-than-expected quarterly figures released by Alcoa and cost-reduction moves by Citigroup. Shares of aluminum producer Alcoa rose 2.2% in pre-open trading after the Dow component posted earnings of 79 cents a share on $7.9 revenue increase, topping expectations of earnings of 76 cents a share and revenue of $7.6 billion.
- Elena
- 11 Apr, 2007
- New York City
Citigroup, the U.S. biggest financial institution, announced it will reduce its work force by about 17,000 jobs as part of a restructuring plan aiming at lower costs and improved profit. The bank said in a statement that the overhaul will save the bank about $2.1 billion in 2007, $3.7 billion in 2008 and $4.6 billion in 2009.