U.S. stock futures are trading below fair value, as the government shutdown extends to a third day. The Senate failed to pass a short-term spending bill over the weekend, though Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has scheduled a vote for 12 p.m. ET today for a stopgap bill that would fund the federal government through Feb. 8.
Among individual stocks, Netflix (NFLX) will likely be in focus ahead of tonight's earnings report, while shares of Apple (AAPL) are lower ahead of the bell, after the tech giant was downgraded at Atlantic Equities on concerns over softening iPhone demand. Nevertheless, the pre-market downside is modest, as the Dow and its fellow equity benchmarks continue to hold near record highs.
Continue reading for more on today's market, including:
GE just wrapped its worst week since the March 2009 market bottom.This drug stock is a steal.In case you missed it, one blockchain stock is screaming "buy."Plus, Teva stock slumps; an energy giant's earnings beat; and the $9 billion biotech buyout.
The U.S. government shutdown was the primary focus for overseas markets today. Stocks in Asia closed mostly higher, with South Korea's Kospi standing as the one negative outlier; the index dropped 0.7% on weakness from heavyweight Samsung Electronics. In China, the Shanghai Composite rose 0.4%, as did the Hang Seng in Hong Kong. Japan's Nikkei advanced fractionally, as tech names -- a group including a number of Apple suppliers -- outperformed.
Turning to Europe, investors are digesting a fresh round of corporate earnings reports, and stocks are sticking close to breakeven at midday. Bank stock UBS is seeing extra attention as the shares pull back following a larger-than-expected quarterly loss. Meanwhile, Sanofi SA isfalling sharply in Paris after the company announced it's buying U.S. firm Bioverativ for close to $12 billion. London's FTSE 100 and the German DAX were up 0.1% at last check, and the French CAC 40 was sporting a slim 0.2% lead.