Forecasting the major catalysts in tomorrow's market, with Stephanie Link, The Street; Steven Rosen, Societe Generale; and Craig Hodges, The Hodges Fund.
CNBC's Steve Liesman offers insight on unemployment data and which economic indicator best gauges the health of the U.S. economy. Ken Sena, Evercore Partners analyst, also shares his expectations for LinkedIn ahead of its earnings report this afternoon.
Treasury yields are down after ISM results show the U.S. manufacturing sector has improved. Jim Iuorio, TJM Institutional Services says "right now, I think yields are going higher and the curve is going to steepen." Meanwhile Todd Gordon, Aspen Trading Group, offers his view on the Norweigan krone.
CNBC's Kelly Evans takes a look at the ISM data globally, and while it came in on the positive side in the U.S. its a different story in other countries.
Federal Reserve easing has helped fire up one of the strongest stock market rebounds ever, and the promise of more is keeping it going, some analysts say.
Chris Rupkey, Chief Financial Economist, Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ explains how the improving U.S. jobs data recently can be traced to the ISM numbers.
Wall Street kicked off the New Year in a bullish mood. A data-packed Thursday will put the market's mojo to the test, with two key jobs reports and the retail holiday report cards.
US manufacturing activity—as well as employment in the sector—rose to the highest level since June, the latest sign that Friday’s jobs number may be better than some expect.
Investors may expect slowing growth in the U.S. — a theory that Tuesday's ISM data seem to support. According to TheStreet however, manufacturing businesses are fueling the U.S. recovery in this country and quality stocks may be worth considering buying now.