
U.S. stock futures are indicating this morning that the markets may continue yesterday's rally and start the session higher. After the Dow Jones Industrial Average closed at a record high yesterday, this morning investors will focus on housing and car and truck sales.
Yesterday, the start of the fourth quarter, U.S. stocks rallied with the Dow reaching record highs, on hopes of future rate cuts. Huge write downs announced by banks also helped sentiment as many were hoping these mean the credit crisis is coming under control and being dealt with. The Dow industrials gained nearly 192 points to close at a new record 14,0857, having hit an intraday high of 14,115. This 1.38% climb was matched by the Nasdaq Composite and the S&P 500 with 1.46% and 1.33% respective advances of their own.
Only August pending U.S. home sales will be released today at 10:00 a.m. and sales are expected to show a further decline.
Car makers will report
September car and truck sales with Honda the only manufacturer expected to show year-over-year gains, according to
MarketWatch, but the overall industry is starting to stabilize after car makers experienced a tough summer in the showrooms due to the sluggish economic climate. According to the average estimates of seven analysts in a
Bloomberg survey, however, Ford Motor Co. (NYSE: F) and Chrysler are expected to post 15% and 5.9% declines in September U.S. sales and GM (NYSE: GM) a 3% increase.
Overseas, Asian markets
rose to record highs with Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index closing above 28,000 points for the first time, Australia, Singapore, and Indonesia also reaching records. European stocks continued their
advance today for the second day in a row, boosted by gains from the banking sector and solid results from British supermarket giant Tesco.
Palm Inc. (NASDAQ:
PALM) shares fell nearly 5% in after-hours trading yesterday after the company reported a a
small loss in its fiscal first quarter and forecast lower-than-expected results for the current quarter. As Palm continues to struggle, rivals Apple and RIM's performance has been phenomenal. In the quarter Palm sold 689,000 Treos, up 21% from the year-ago period. It lost $841,000, or a penny per share, in the first quarter on revenue that rose to $360.8 million, 1% above the year-ago period. Excluding charges, Palm would have earned $9.7 million, or 9 cents per share, beating analysts expectations. But Palm also issued a weak outlook.
TD Bank Financial Group (NYSE:
TD) said it
will acquire Commerce Bancorp Inc. (NYSE:
CBH) in a stock-and-cash deal valued at $8.5 billion.
Yahoo Inc. (NYSE:
YHOO), in yet another attempt to gain back some market share from rival Google Inc. (NASDAQ:
GOOG) in internet search, has
retooled its online search engine to make it more helpful and engaging.