- Major Retail Earnings in Focus Ahead of Shopping Season
- Look Ahead: 'Risk On' Sentiment Could Fuel Rally Further
- Week Ahead: Stocks Search for Catalyst in Quiet Week
- Unemployment May Crack 10%, Job Losses to Bottom
- Look Ahead: Choppy Trade Likely, Cisco to Boost Techs
- Will Fed Change Its Tune?
- Tuesday Preview: Stocks to Seesaw, Economy in Focus
- Week Ahead: Volatility, the Fed and Plenty of Economic Data
- Stocks Unlikely to be Spooked on Halloween Eve
- US GDP Pivotal to Market Sentiment on Thursday
RSS FEED
MOST SHARED
- AIG CEO Ready to Quit over Pay Constraints: Report
- Herbalife Vs. Hedge Funds
- Gold Hits Record High Above $1,115 as Dollar Slides
- Apple Surpasses Nokia as Top Cellphone Maker by Profits
- Bring on Tougher Regulation: S&P Owner
- 5% of Americans Plan to Buy a Home Next Year
- US Recovery to be Weak, Erratic: Top Fed Officials
- China Factory Output Leaps to 19-Month Highs
- Glaxo Wins FDA Approval to Sell H1N1 Vaccine
- 3 Safe Investments That Let You ‘Sleep Better:’ Strategist
- Beware of 'Trampling Effect' When Market Tops: Manager
- Gold Heading to $1150: Art Hogan
- Starbucks Brews Up Growth
- Farr: An Extended Period—No Fat Lady in Sight
- More Upside if S&P Passes This Number: Market Pro
- Murdoch Lashes Out At Google
- Fighting The Flu Vaccine Critics
- Nov. 10: Unusual Volume Leaders
- China Hints at Yuan's Departure From Dollar Peg
- AIG CEO Ready to Quit over Pay Constraints: Report
- Pay Caps Make it Hard for GM to Hire Execs: Whitacre
- Unemployment May Cause Loan Defaults in US: Zoellick
- Just 1 in 20 Plan to Buy a Home Next Year: Survey
- US Recovery to be Weak, Erratic: Top Fed Officials
- Bring on Tougher Regulation: S&P Owner
- Retail Earnings in Focus Ahead of Shopping Season
- Ponzi Proceeds: Bidding on Madoff's Toys
Market Insider
Whether stocks add to Tuesday's heady gains or not will be determined in part by whether oil prices stay in a downtrend.
There are a few earnings to influence the market Wednesday, and traders are wary of Freddie Mac's early morning report. Cisco's after the bell earnings report though should be a positive catalyst.
The Dow Tuesday rocketed 331 points. The market added to already sharp gains once the Fed's afternoon statement showed it was as concerned about inflation as the economy. In other words, it took a neutral stance.
But stocks started moving up early, as oil trended lower, and traders expect crude to be as big a factor Wednesday. There is no economic data of note, but there is weekly oil inventory data.
"It's all oil. Oil, oil. That's all I care about, and that's what prompted some pretty decent short covering in here," UBS director of floor operations Art Cashin said from the floor of the NYSE, shortly after the Fed announcement.
Oil hit a three-month low of $118 per barrel and finished at $119.17 on the Nymex. Concerns about the slowing global economy, along with a noticeable decline in U.S. gasoline use, are helping drive oil lower.
Commodities in general again slumped Tuesday on concerns that global economic growth is slowing, and emerging economies will no longer pick up the slack or provide the anticipated demand. Gold settled at $886.10, down $21.80. The dollar jumped 0.78 percent against the euro to a level of $1.5464 per euro.
Oil Drill
Platts survey shows analysts expect weekly crude inventories to be down by 1.2 million barrels when they are reported at 10:35 a.m. Wednesday. Gasoline is expected to be down by 1.4 million barrels and distillates are expected to increase by 2.3 million barrels.
M.F. Global's senior vice president John Kilduff said oil has been in a range of $118 to $126. "We're in a channel and we're pressing the low end of it," said Kilduff, a CNBC contributor.
"Technically, (oil prices) it's looking negative, and even despite today's buoyancy in the stock market, you have to be concerned about the economic outlook. It's looking to go lower still. We were watching $121 for the last several weeks, and now we're watching $117," he said.
Getting Technical
The Dow finished at 11,615, up 2.9 percent, and the S&P was at 1284.88, up 2.8 percent.
Scott Redler, chief strategic officer of T3Live.com, says for now the path of least resistance for stocks is higher, and this may be the beginning of a trend that stays in place for a few weeks. Stocks have now established three higher lows.
He told me just before the Tuesday close that stocks were near levels where they could be challenged—1285 on the S&P 500 and 11,600 on the Dow. If those targets are successfully crossed, the next level is 1320 to 1330 on the S&P and 11,900 to 12,000 on the Dow.
At those levels, stocks would look risky again and investors need to be cautious, he said. Another key factor will be how low oil actually goes, and a risk there is a macro event that could cause it to spike.
Earnings Central
Earnings expected before the bell include Time Warner [TWX
Loading...
()
], Blackstone [BX
Loading...
()
], Sprint Nextel [S
Loading...
()
], Nasdaq OMX [NDAQ
Loading...
()
], Och-Ziff Capital [OZM
Loading...
()
], and Marsh and McLennan [MMC
Loading...
()
]. Devon Energy [DVN
Loading...
()
], Transocean [RIG
Loading...
()
] and El Paso [EP
Loading...
()
] also report before the bell.
AIG [AIG
Loading...
()
] reports after the bell, as does Sunoco [SUN
Loading...
()
].
Sign of the Times - Wine Cooler
Smith & Wollensky chairman Alan Stillman was on "Squawk Box" Tuesday, and he said business is great at his high-end New York City restaurants. "It's the first time in my years in the restaurant business when I can say that New York City is a completely different country than the rest of the United States," he said. Outside of New York the high-end restaurants are feeling the pinch, "but they are booming in New York."
Stillman said his customer base definitely includes tourists from abroad, but Wall Streeters and other New Yorkers are still dining out. As he left the studio, he told me that he hasn't seen a change in the types of meals customers are ordering, but they have toned down their wine purchases. "$200 to $500 bottles of wine are not selling the way they were two to three years ago," he said.
Questions? Comments?
- Bernard and Ruth Madoff's personal possessions will be auctioned this weekend. Click ahead to see.
- If you are lucky enough to have money and the time, this is a great time to see America, says CNBC's Jane Wells.
- What’s powering your microwave, fridge and computer? Part of it is fuel from Russian nuclear weapons. The NYT reports.
- How the Lord’s Prayer would read if Goldman Sachs’ Lloyd Blankfein were substituted for you-know-who.
- With 123 years of history, slogans and commercials, Coca-Cola is the most recognized brand on earth.
- The opening of a virtual pet store in “World of Warcraft” could prove a cash bonanza for Activision-Blizzard.












