Home
Login Register
Others   

Dow

 Post Reply 501-520 of 2084
 
xoefxoef
    15-Feb-2007 23:16  
Contact    Quote!


Oil & Gold up, USD down.

 
 
xoefxoef
    15-Feb-2007 23:15  
Contact    Quote!




NYFE
399.00 -1.25 -0.31% 2/14/2007
Crude oil NYMEX 58.10 +0.10 +0.17% 2/15/2007
9:41:00 AM
Feeder cattle CME 100.80 +0.08 +0.07% 2/14/2007
2:22:00 PM
Gold COMEX 672.20 +0.20 +0.03% 2/15/2007
9:43:00 AM
 
 
billywows
    15-Feb-2007 23:11  
Contact    Quote!
Dow industrial reaches record high of 12,769.90 in intraday trade!!!
 

 
billywows
    15-Feb-2007 23:08  
Contact    Quote!


Dow up 18 points and Nasdaq up 5 points now.
---------------

THE FED
Bernanke faces skeptical Democrats
WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) - Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke wraps up his two-day congressional testimony on Thursday with a visit to the Democratic-controlled House Financial Services Committee.
After delivering identical testimony to Wednesday's Senate appearance, Bernanke is expected face tough questioning about rising economic inequality in the United States, and about the Fed's dual mandate of maximizing employment and keeping prices stable.
The hearing begins at 10 a.m. (2300hrs S'pore)
On Wednesday, Bernanke helped to fuel market rallies, saying the Federal Open Market Committee expects core inflation to fall back below 2% next year. The FOMC expects modest growth and steady unemployment over the next two years.
Inflation remains the greatest risk to the outlook, Bernanke said.
House Financial Services Chairman Barney Frank, D-Mass., took the unusual step of holding a two-day hearing on the semiannual monetary policy report, with several critical economists scheduled to testify to the committee on Friday.
Frank has expressed his opposition to any move by the Fed to abandon its statutory goal of full employment in favor of an inflation target. Bernanke is known to favor an explicit inflation target, but has not yet pushed the FOMC to adopt one.
Fed officials have said repeatedly that price stability is a prerequisite for full employment. In the long run, they say, the Fed cannot encourage greater job growth by allowing more inflation. End of Story
---------------
 
 
billywows
    15-Feb-2007 23:01  
Contact    Quote!
Yeah! .... Swinging up now after a FLAT opening! Dow up 19 points and Nasdaq up 2 points now.
 
 
xoefxoef
    15-Feb-2007 23:00  
Contact    Quote!
Industrial Output Falls 0.5 Pct. in Jan.
Published: February 15, 2007


Filed at 9:29 a.m. ET

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Industrial output fell in January by the largest amount in 17 months, reflecting huge cutbacks at auto factories.

The Federal Reserve reported Thursday that output at the nation's factories, mines and utilities was down 0.5 percent in January, the biggest setback since Hurricane Katrina disrupted activity in the fall of 2005.

Half of the decline last month reflected a drop of 6 percent in output at auto and auto parts factories. Overall, manufacturing fell by 1.2 percent.

In addition to the cuts in the auto industry, output in the mining sector, which includes oil production, fell by 1.2 percent in January.

The declines were offset somewhat by a 2.3 percent rise in utility output as the unusually mild weather of December was followed by more normal winter weather in January, boosting electricity and natural gas output.

In other economic news, the Labor Department reported that the number of newly laid off workers jumped last week, reflecting in part the frigid weather in many parts of the country.

Jobless claims rose to 357,000 last week, the highest level since late November. The increase of 44,000 claims from the previous week was the biggest one-week increase since Sept. 10, 2005, when claims soared in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina hitting the Gulf Coast.

The four-week moving average for claims rose to 326,250 last week, the highest level in nine weeks and an indication that conditions in the job market have softened.

Part of the increase in jobless claims last week was due to a blast of cold in the Midwest and Northeast, which triggered higher layoffs in such industries as construction.

Many analysts believe that the unemployment rate, which edged up from 4.5 percent to 4.6 percent in January, will keep rising to perhaps a peak of 5 percent later this year as the economy slows under the impact of previous credit-tightening by the Federal Reserve.

The Fed pushed a key interest rate up from a 46-year low of 1 percent to the current 5.25 percent during a two-year period, with the last rate hike occurring in June 2006.

Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke, delivering the central bank's latest economic forecast to Congress this week, indicated that the Fed is likely to hold rates steady as the slowing economy works to lower inflation pressures.

Many analysts believe the Fed is on the verge of achieving its hoped-for soft landing in which growth slows enough to lower inflation pressures without triggering a recession.

The rise of 44,000 claims to 357,000 last week followed a smaller increase of 5,000 in the previous week.

In the week ending Feb. 3, 38 states and territories reported declines in benefit applications while 14 had an increase and one had no change. The state figures, unlike the national data, are not adjusted for seasonal variations.

The states with the biggest declines in jobless claims for the week of Feb. 3 were Missouri, down 3,250, reflecting fewer layoffs in construction; South Carolina, down 2,494, with fewer layoffs in manufacturing; and Pennsylvania, down 2,154, with fewer layoffs in textile, clothing and furniture manufacturing.

The states with the biggest increases in claims were Virginia, up 2,286, and Michigan, with an increase of 1,336, which was blamed on higher layoffs at auto plants
 

 
xoefxoef
    15-Feb-2007 22:57  
Contact    Quote!


WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The number of U.S. workers signing up for first-time jobless benefits surged a bigger-than-expected 44,000 last week as wintry storms in the Midwest and Northeast put more people in the unemployment lines, the government said on Thursday.

Initial jobless claims hit a seasonally adjusted 357,000 for the week ended February 10, the Labor Department said. That was the highest level since November and the biggest weekly jump since September 2005.

A department official attributed winter storms that shutdown parts of the Midwest and Northeast in part to the big rise in jobless claims, but he said more details would be available next week.

Economists polled ahead of the report were expecting little change from the previous week's jobless claims, which were revised up by 2,000 to 313,000.

Even so, the four-week moving average, a more reliable measure of employment conditions because it irons out such volatility, rose by 17,500 to 326,250 last week, pointing to some weakness in the labor markets as the economy cools off this year from a robust end to 2006.

The number of workers continuing on unemployment benefits rose by 71,000 to a seasonally adjusted 2.560 million in the week ended February3, the most recent week these data were available. That was the highest level since January of last year.
 
 
xoefxoef
    15-Feb-2007 22:52  
Contact    Quote!
Dow up 8 points. Waiting for more positive news from Bernanke
 
 
billywows
    15-Feb-2007 22:34  
Contact    Quote!
US market opens Mixing Flat .... Dow down 1 point and Nasdaq up 1 point.
 
 
billywows
    15-Feb-2007 22:25  
Contact    Quote!
January industrial output falls 0.5%, biggest decline since


  
------------------
 

 
elfinchilde
    15-Feb-2007 21:59  
Contact    Quote!


hi,

does anyone know the tech support/resistance level for the DOW? thanks
 
 
billywows
    15-Feb-2007 21:54  
Contact    Quote!


Yeah .....
INDICATIONS
U.S. stock futures turn mostly higher
New York manufacturing activity up unexpectedly; Bernanke to speak again
LONDON (MarketWatch) -- U.S. stock futures turned mostly higher Thursday, boosted by an unexpectedly big jump in manufacturing activity in the New York area on February and a slightly larger drop in import prices in January.
The rise in futures was tentative, however, with investors uncertain whether Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke's second day of testimony to Congress can produce a second session of sharp gains.
S&P 500 futures inched 0.40 of a point higher to 1,459.00 and Nasdaq 100 futures slipped 0.25 of a point to 1,822.50. Dow industrial futures tacked on 15 points to 12,780.
-----------
 
 
billywows
    15-Feb-2007 21:46  
Contact    Quote!
ECONOMIC REPORT
Jobless claims jump 44,000 to 357,000
Continuing claims rise to highest level in a year
 
 
billywows
    15-Feb-2007 21:44  
Contact    Quote!
ECONOMIC REPORT
New York factory activity rebounds sharply in Feb.
 
 
billywows
    15-Feb-2007 21:28  
Contact    Quote!
INDICATIONS
U.S. stock futures turn mixed
New York, Philadelphia-area surveys ahead; Bernanke to talk again
 

 
shplayer
    15-Feb-2007 21:19  
Contact    Quote!
European markets look very cautious today.
 
 
billywows
    15-Feb-2007 21:13  
Contact    Quote!


Tonite's US encomonic data to be out below:



2130hrs: Jobless claims
2130hrs: NY empire state index
2130hrs: Export prices ex. ag.
2130hrs: Import prices ex. oil
2215hrs: Industrial production
2215hrs: Capacity utilization
0100hrs: Philadelphia fed survey
0530hrs: Money supply (M2)
 
 
billywows
    15-Feb-2007 00:41  
Contact    Quote!
WoW! Dow up 82 points and Nasdaq up 31 points now!!!!!!
 
 
billywows
    14-Feb-2007 23:51  
Contact    Quote!
Dow up 63 points and Nasdaq up 23 points now ... SHIOK!
 
 
billywows
    14-Feb-2007 23:33  
Contact    Quote!


Yup, iPunter .... Thanks to Big Ben!

-------------

Dow reaches record high


The S&P 500 Index was last up 10 points at 1,454, the highest level seen since October 2000. The Nasdaq Composite was last up 26 points at 2,486.

Bernanke said in testimony to Congress about monetary policy that "incoming data have supported the view that the current stance of policy is likely to foster sustainable economic growth and a gradual ebbing of core inflation." End of Story

----------------
 
Important: Please read our Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy .