After posting its fifth straight record close and its seventh consecutive win, the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) is pointed higher before the open, as the highly anticipated two-day Federal Reserve monetary-policy meeting kicks offtoday. The central bank isn't expected to lift interest rates until December, but could detail plans to unwind its massive balance sheet. Traders are also digesting the latest round of economic data, which showedhousing starts dipped in line with expectations in August. However, building permits surged to a seven-month high.
Meanwhile, speculators are eyeing Hurricane Maria -- the second major storm in two weeks to hit the Caribbean islands. The Category 5 storm could be headed for Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands later this week, according to experts.
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Japan's Nikkei came back from a long holiday weekend to score a 2% gain -- closing at its highest perch in two years -- as a cooling yen helped boost exporters and retail stocks. The same can't be said for the rest of Asia, however, as markets across the region settled lower ahead of a two-day central bank meeting in the U.S. At the close, Hong Kong's Hang Seng was down 0.4%, China's Shanghai Composite was off 0.2%, and South Korea's Kospi had given back 0.09%.
European benchmarks are mixed at midday, as caution sets in ahead of tomorrow's policy decision and balance sheet update from the U.S. Fed. London's FTSE 100 is outperforming its peers, up 0.3% as J Sainsbury leads a rally in grocery stocks. The French CAC 40 is also higher, adding 0.1% after the country's finance ministry lowered its deficit forecasts for 2017 and 2018, citing better-than-expected economic growth. The German DAX, on the other hand, is down 0.1%, even after a Zew reading on investor confidence rose for the first time in four months.