Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) futures are higher this morning, after the index enjoyed another record-setting session yesterday. Now, the blue-chip index could take aim at the lofty 24,000 benchmark, and secure an eighth straight monthly win. S&P 500 Index (SPX) futures are also signaling a positive session, with the index set to extend its longest monthly winning streak since the financial crisis. Nasdaq-100 Index (NDX) futures are tilting higher as well,as tech stocks attempt to rebound from an extensive sell-off yesterday.
Investors continue to anxiously watch Washington, D.C., for news on the Republican tax plan, which could go to a vote on the Senate floor today. Elsewhere, oil markets are in focus, with the highly anticipated Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) meeting today. The cartel and other big oil producers are reportedly set to agree to extended output cuts through 2018. At last check, January-dated crude futures are 0.6% higher at $57.63 per barrel.
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Weekly jobless claims and the Chicago purchasing managers index (PMI) are due today. The central bank circuit will continue with an early afternoon appearance from Dallas Fed President Robert Kaplan.Barnes & Noble (BKS), Express (EXPR), Five Below (FIVE),Ulta Beauty (ULTA), VMware (VMW), and Zumiez (ZUMZ) will report earnings.
It was a mostly lower finish in Asia today, as regional tech stocks fell in step with their U.S. counterparts. Sharp drops for Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix helped send South Korea's Kospi to a 1.5% loss, while the won plunged after the Bank of Korea raised interest rates for the first time in six years. Elsewhere, Hong Kong's Hang Seng plummeted 1.5%, while China's Shanghai Composite slipped 0.6%, even after the country's official manufacturing purchasing managers index (PMI) came in above the consensus estimate. Japan's Nikkei bucked the bearish bias, though, finishing up 0.6% as a pop in financial stocks overshadowed a slimmer-than-expected rise in October industrial output.
European markets are mixed at midday, as traders digest an onslaught of economic data. While consumer prices in the eurozone rose at a slower-than-forecast pace in November, unemployment throughout the currency bloc fell to a nearly nine-year low of 8.8% in October. And while a meeting among global oil producers has energy shares in focus, bank stocks are higher after Credit Suisse raised its 2018 profit target for its Asia-Pacific wealth-management and connected division. At last check, the German DAX is up 0.5% after data showed unemployment remained at a record low last month, and the French CAC 40 is 0.2% higher. London's FTSE 100, meanwhile, is down 0.2%, as the pound rallies on upbeat Brexit talk.