The stock market today (Wednesday) climbed slightly this morning as investors waited on the much anticipated European Union summit to begin.
The two-day meeting, which involves the leaders of all 27 EU nations, starts Thursday and many are hoping for signs of deeper integration and building blocks for a new foundation of EU policies.
"What is at stake is not only the economic integration, it is also the overall economic confidence in the euro area, and indeed, our commitment to the European project," said European Commission President Jose Barroso, in a speech Tuesday. "This is why we need to be bold and define the way forward."
After Cyprus became the fifth country to seek a bailout following Greece, Ireland, Portugal and Spain, investors have become more and more pessimistic as to what can be accomplished at the summit. German Chancellor Angela Merkel stiffly opposed the idea of common Eurozone bonds proposed by Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti and preferred by Spain and France as well.
At a meeting of lawmakers from her Free Democratic coalition partners in Berlin on Tuesday, Merkel made her opinion clear.
"I don't see total debt liability as long as I live," said Merkel, a day after calling the idea of euro bonds "economically wrong and counterproductive," according to people who attended the closed-door session.
As investors awaited the summit, economic reports on durable goods orders and pending home sales spurred the markets forward today.
Orders for durable goods climbed 1.1%, the first rise in three months and far ahead of economists' expectations of a 0.5% increase. Pending home sales matched a two-year high.
The National Association of Realtors said on Wednesday its Pending Home Sales Index, based on contracts signed last month, rose 5.9% to 101.1. The index level matched the two-year high reached in March, while the gain was the largest since October 2011.
These reports could keep the momentum going for a housing recovery, following positive home prices and new home sales reports earlier this week.
Beyond Europe and housing, here are some companies making headlines in the stock market today.
Facebook (Nasdaq: FB) stock can now receive opinions and analysis for the first time since its IPO from the 33 underwriters who handled the offering, as the "quiet period" ends today. This period is a 40-day timeframe following an IPO that prohibits the firms involved to publish recommendations.
So far there are mixed reports from many of the larger firms.
Goldman Sachs (NYSE: GS) initiated its coverage with a "Buy" rating and a $42 price target for the next twelve months, Royal Bank of Canada (NYSE: RY) offered an "Overweight" rating and a $40 price target, and Morgan Stanley (NYSE: MS) also offered an "Overweight" rating and a $38 target equal to the IPO price.
On the less positive side were Bank of America (NYSE: BAC) and Citigroup (NYSE: C), who both offered a "Neutral" weighting and price targets of $38 and $35, respectively.
eurozone bonds
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Stock Market Today: Europe Waits as Housing Rebounds
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Does the Eurozone Have Its Own Lehman Bros?
Does the Eurozone have its own American International Group Inc. (NYSE: AIG), or worse, its own Lehman Bros. when it comes to Greece?
I believe it does.
Why else would the European Union have bent over backwards to "save" a member nation that: A) Accounts for 2.01% of the EU by trade volume; and B) Would essentially be like letting Montana go out of business - no offense to Montanans or Montana!
More to the point, if things really were under control, why would European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet say that risk signals for financial stability in the euro area are flashing "red" as he did following a meeting of the European Systemic Risk Board in Frankfurt?
The short answer: Because he knows what the European banks are desperately trying to hide from the rest of the world - that there are still enormous risks and they're even more concentrated now than they were in 2008 at the start of the financial crisis.
I believe it does.
Why else would the European Union have bent over backwards to "save" a member nation that: A) Accounts for 2.01% of the EU by trade volume; and B) Would essentially be like letting Montana go out of business - no offense to Montanans or Montana!
More to the point, if things really were under control, why would European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet say that risk signals for financial stability in the euro area are flashing "red" as he did following a meeting of the European Systemic Risk Board in Frankfurt?
The short answer: Because he knows what the European banks are desperately trying to hide from the rest of the world - that there are still enormous risks and they're even more concentrated now than they were in 2008 at the start of the financial crisis.
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