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  • Ivaylo
  • 11 Jan, 2007
  • New York City

Japanese index ended lower on Thursday as advances in Tokyo Electron and other technology stocks were unable to counter broader weakness in large-caps in view of the growing worries that the Bank of Japan will raise interest rates no later than next week. Resource shares traded mostly higher on other Asian markets, with investors retuning to the mining sector following a surge in metals prices. Australia gained, but HK and Taiwan declined.

  • Ivaylo
  • 11 Jan, 2007
  • New York City

European markets opened on a positive note on Thursday, supported by advances in the mining sector and as shares in German retailer Metro rose aided by a sales update from the group. Technology shares were also doing well in Europe, with mobile phone maker Nokia and chipmaker Infineon Technologies both gaining. U.K. supermarket chain J. Sainsbury was down, however. The U.K. FTSE 100 advanced 0.5%, the German DAX Xetra 30 index gained 0.6% and the French CAC-40 index rose 0.6%.

  • Ivaylo
  • 11 Jan, 2007
  • New York City

Investors were of the opinion that the contract move above the $2.59 level triggered new buying in copper after heavy losses since the start of the new year. Gold and silver futures were pressured by a strong U.S. dollar and weak crude oil, yet managed to pare their losses. April platinum went as high as $1,163.90 in electronic activity, its strongest level since Dec. 5. Light, sweet crude for February delivery hit a low of $53.63, the lowest level for a front month contract since June 2005.

  • 123jump.com Staff
  • 04 Jan, 2008
  • New York City

U.S. stocks fell sharply after weaker than expected employment report for the month of December. Economy created only 18,000 new jobs in the month and for the year generated 1.3 million new jobs, far less than the 2 million target set by the current U.S. administration. Intel lost nearly 10% after UBS cut its rating on the company. Crude oil and gold retreated after the jobs report. Retailers, technology, and consumer sensitive stocks fell sharply. Apple, RIM, Master Card, and Google declined.

  • 123jump.com Staff
  • 10 Jan, 2007
  • New York City

A familiar weakness in oil dragged crude price another 3% today totaling a loss of 9% for the year. Weekly crude oil inventory data reported a fall in crude oil inventory by 5 million barrels. November month trade deficit declined 1% on lower oil price in the month. Las Vegas Sands rose 11% or $10.40 on the permission for expansion near Macau. Apple, Marvell Tech and New Oriental Education closed up 5%. New York Stock Exchange led group to invest 5% in National Stock Exchange in India.

  • Elena
  • 10 Jan, 2007
  • New York City

European stocks ended Wednesday trading session considerably lower, pressured by weakness in the tech and telecom sectors, as well as losses for leading auto companies. Nokia shares dropped 2.2% after Apple introduced its iPhone. Automaker Porsche slipped 0.5%, while Volkswagen shares declined 1.6%. The German DAX 30 slipped 0.7%, the French CAC 40 fell 0.6%, and London FTSE 100 dropped 0.6%.

  • Elena
  • 10 Jan, 2007
  • New York City

U.S. stock market averages traded down, pressured by further weakness in the oil and gas sector after a petroleum report showed larger-than-expected increases in U.S. gasoline and distillate inventories. ConocoPhillips dropped 2.5% and Chevron Corp. slipped 1.7%. However, tech stocks rose for a second day in a row, boosted by the introduction of Apple Inc.''s new media-playing cell phone. Apple shares rose 4.6%.

  • Elena
  • 10 Jan, 2007
  • New York City

A sell-off in large-caps like ONGC, HDFC, ICICI Bank and Reliance Communications weighed on the benchmark index Wednesday in a broad decline. Weakness in Asian markets and caution ahead of tomorrow

  • Elena
  • 10 Jan, 2007
  • New York City

Wall Street started trading in the negative territory on Wednesday, reflecting weak oil prices and a profit warning from a major oil company. Chevron fell 1.6% after it warned that its Q4 profit would be hurt by falling commodity prices. Alcoa helped boost the Dow, rising 4% after it posted better-than-expected earnings. The aluminum producer posted 60% profit jump in the fourth quarter.

  • Ivaylo
  • 10 Jan, 2007
  • New York City

Financial stocks plunged following a strong showing in the previous session on comment from Lehman Brothers, stating that it expects the sector to underperform its European peers. Energy stocks were also lower, with Scottish & Southern Energy leading the decliners in the sector. Supermarket William Morrison is the best performer on the market as it reported upbeat same-store sales. By mid-afternoon, the FTSE 100 was down 32.8 points, or 0.45%, at 6.168.

  • Elena
  • 10 Jan, 2007
  • New York City

U.S. stock futures pointed to a lower market opening Wednesday due to a drop in Latin American shares and steep declines in oil prices. According to a Commerce Department report, the U.S. trade deficit fell unexpectedly by 1.0% in November to $58.2 billion, marking the third straight decline in the deficit and its lowest level since July 2005. Alcoa rose 4.5% in pre-open after reporting stronger-than-expected Q4 results.

  • Elena
  • 10 Jan, 2007
  • New York City

The improved bid followed a rejection of the first bid valued at $8.4 billion. It amounts to $5 billion in cash and 89.5 million shares of US Airways stock, higher than the original offer including 78.5 million shares of US Airways stock and $4 billion in cash.

  • 123jump.com Staff
  • 09 Jan, 2007
  • New York City

News of job cuts at Sprint Nextel and earnings revision from other companies kept market averages under check. Oil dropped to an eight months low failed to excite traders. Apple released new mobile phone with features of iPod. Venezuela plans to nationalize largest TV network and electric utility. The news dragged the local market index down 19%. Asian markets rebounded after a two-day drop.

  • Elena
  • 09 Jan, 2007
  • New York City

European stocks closed mixed, reflecting losses for major oil companies and some positive broker upgrades across several sectors. Heavyweight BP declined 3.1%, Total''s shares sank 1.3%, Statoil declined 3.1% and Norsk Hydro lost 1.2%. French CAC 40 rose 0.3%, the German DAX added 0.1%, while London FTSE 100 inched up 0.03%.

  • Elena
  • 09 Jan, 2007
  • New York City

U.S. market averages turned mixed in late morning trade, reflecting a steep decline in crude oil prices and optimism about the technology sector. Tech stocks were among the biggest drivers in the session with news coming from the annual Macworld Expo in San Francisco and Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas. Apple Computer rose 1.9% on expectations the company will announce its first mobile phones.