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Pastimes : Tidbits

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To: Didi who wrote (136)6/13/2000 8:16:00 AM
From: Didi  Read Replies (2) of 1115
 
Market News--The Washington Post: >>>U.S. Stocks Seen Opening Higher

By Margaret Webb Pressler
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday , June 13, 2000

Wall Street is trying once again to come out of its funk, after yesterday's rally was erased by a late-day sell-off.

Shortly before 7:30 a.m., the S&P futures index is trading nearly ten points above fair value, suggesting the market could move sharply higher at the opening bell. Typically, each point of difference between the futures index and fair value represents about eight points of the Dow Jones industrial average. Nasdaq futures are also trading higher this morning.

This bullish sentiment, though, could change quickly after this morning's release on retail sales for May--the first of several important economic reports to be released this week. Economists are expecting that retail sales will have risen 0.1 percent last month, partially offsetting the 0.2 percent decrease in April. If the actual figures are in line with these estimates, it would support the growing view that the Federal Reserve will decide not to raise interest rates again when it meets again later this month.

But the market is in a quandary these days: on one hand, it wants to see signs of a slowdown, because it does not want the Fed to push interest rates higher. On the other hand, if the economy slows too much, it could hurt corporate profits. The retail sector has already been hurt in recent weeks by fears that consumer spending is tightening--and scattered reports from some chains that their profits are falling.

In addition to walking this tightrope between excessive growth and weaker profits, the market has also been whipped lately by the wide variation in financial results from the nation's companies. Yesterday, for example, the market's early optimism was derailed by a couple of reports from technology firms that their earnings would be below expectations. Investors had to weigh that news against a statement from fiber optic company Corning that its results would come in well above Wall Street estimates. In the end, the bears won out.

Today could just make the mix of good news and bad news even harder to sort out. In addition to scouring the Commerce Department release on retail sales, today investors will be weighing earnings reports from consumer electronics chain Best Buy and home retailer Pier One Imports.

Overseas, markets in Europe are mixed, with stocks rising in London but falling in Paris and Frankfurt. In Asia, most major markets fell today, though the decline was modest in Tokyo. The Nikkei 225 lost 65.66 to close today at 16,914.95.

¸ 2000 Washington Post Newsweek Interactive <<<

washingtonpost.com
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