U.S. Market
Stocks surged today with the Dow closing over 10,000 after having its best day since mid-July. The market cheered productivity data, initial unemployment claims, earnings and same-store sales results.
Third-quarter non-farm
productivity numbers jumped 9.5% as businesses were able to do more with fewer workers. This reading was much higher than the 6.5% rise expected by the markets.
Initial unemployment claims were also
better than expectations. Claims fell 20,000 in the week to 512,000, the lowest level since January.
October same-store sales
results were mixed, with retailers like
TJX
,
Gap
and
Costco
posting gains but teen retailers such as
Abercrombie and Fitch
and
American Eagle
seeing weakness.
The
Dow,
S&P 500 and
NASDAQ were up 2.1%, 1.9% and 2.4% respectively.
Stocks on the Move
Starbucks
saw it's
fourth-quarter earnings soar as the firm was able to cut costs. Same-store sales fell 1% in the quarter, but management was able to cut $580 million from the cost structure this year improving profitability. Starbucks is planning to open 100 stores in the United States and 200 abroad next year. Shares are up 3.8% in after-hours trading.
Unilever
posted a 2% fall in year over year
third-quarter sales, but sales would have increased 3.4% excluding unfavorable foreign currency movements as the firm saw a 3.6% rise in volume. Efforts to reduce manufacturing complexity, eliminate low-margin stock-keeping units, and reduce the employee base led to increased profitability, as the adjusted operating margin expanded 70 basis points to 16.8%. The stock was off 1.4%.
IMS Health
has
agreed to be acquired by private equity firm TPG for $22 a share, a 50% premium to the share price before rumors of the acquisition surfaced. The transaction is expected to close by the end of the first-quarter of 2010, but it is still possible that other bidders could emerge. The stock rose 23%.
MGM Mirage
posted
weak third-quarter results. Excluding figures from Treasure Island, which the company sold in March 2009, total revenue declined 9% to $1.5 billion. Hotel occupancy was stable, but the firm cut room rates in order to replace lost convention business with leisure travelers. Overall revenue per available room dropped 22.5% on the Strip. Casino revenue was down just 1% thanks to strong baccarat play. Shares were up 4.5%
Foreign Markets
European stocks
erased early losses as investors shrugged off the Bank of England’s decision to
pump another 25 billion pounds into the monetary system signaling the Bank’s persistent worry about the state of the economy. The
FTSE 100,
Paris CAC and Germany’s
DAX were up 0.5%, 1.1% and 0.8% respectively.
Asian shares
were mixed as stronger local currencies and recovery fears weighed on exporters. The
Shanghai Composite was up 0.8% while the
Nikkei 225 and
Hang Seng were down 1.3% and 0.6% respectively.