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Tag - KNL

 

 
Kevin Pendley

Record continuing claims, weak profits hurt small caps

Small-cap stocks pushed lower to start Thursday’s session, as the latest figures on weekly claims showed record large numbers of U.S. citizens are on unemployment insurance. In addition, earnings news and monthly retailer sales figures are sloppy as expected, adding to the bearish tone. At 10:01 a.m. ET, the Russell 2000 (NYSE:IWM) was down 4.93, or 1.10%, at 443.55. Although small caps remain above the January lows, the Dow today slipped to the lowest point since the Nov. 21 bottom was carved out.

The weekly claims report rose to a new cycle high, as a sobering number of Americans were forced to file for unemployment benefits last week. The headline figure on claims came out at 626,000, which was way ahead of the projection of 592,000. That figure marked the highest level on weekly claims since 1982. Even more sobering is that the number of people forced to remain on the unemployment rolls climbed to 4.78 million, which is the largest number on record. Although these figures won’t make it into Friday’s big monthly Labor Department jobs report for January, it’s still a troubling sign.

At the same time that the weekly claims report came out, the latest reading on productivity was released, and the number topped the forecast by quite a bit, with productivity coming in at 3.2%, well above the 1.4% projection. The factory orders report at 10:00 a.m. ET came in at minus 3.9% and included a hefty downward revision to last month’s report.

Coming into today’s action, stock markets in Europe and Asia were seeing a mild retreat, with European shares pulled down by losses for insurance companies and consumer products firms. Swiss Re, the world’s second-largest insurer saw double-digit losses in European trading and Warren Buffett invested about $2.6 billion in the firm. The Bank of England trimmed another 50 basis points off their benchmark interest rate, bringing rates down to 1%, the lowest level in more than 300 years for the bank. Meanwhile, the European Central Bank opted to leave their benchmark . . .

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Will Atkinson

Fuqi International, Aspect Medical Systems and Provident Bankshares lead small-cap percentage gainers

Fuqi International, Inc. (Nasdaq:FUQI), Aspect Medical Systems, Inc. (Nasdaq:ASPM) and Provident Bankshares Corp. (Nasdaq:PBKS) are among the biggest percentage gainers in Thursday's trading among companies with market capitalizations under $750 million.

Cano Petroleum, Inc. (AMEX:CFW), Texas Capital Bancshares, Inc. (Nasdaq:TCBI) and Knoll, Inc. (NYSE:KNL) are also among the top small-cap percentage gainers.

Here are Thursday's biggest percentage gainers among small caps:

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Kevin Pendley

Small-cap futures down

Small-cap futures are expected to open lower this morning, with overnight futures trading down about 0.50%. Overseas markets were higher in Asia Wednesday night in line with Wednesday’s gains in U.S. equities, but the move was not as impressive (Europe equities were mixed), which might have sparked profit-taking from short-term traders.

Futures markets wafted through the Weekly Claims report this morning with little change, as the number was close enough to the market consensus to have very little impact on the morning action.

There is further event risk this morning from the Philly Fed survey and Leading Indicators, which both hit the wires at 10:00 a.m. ET. The Philly Fed report is expected to sport five consecutive contraction readings for the first time since the 2001 recession. The Leading Indicators report is a compilation of mostly-known . . .

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Alex Alexandrov

Russell 2000 continues in the red

The Russell 2000 (NYSE:IWM) is in negative territory as investors react to news of a jump in weekly jobless claims.

At 12:19 p.m. ET, the small-cap index had let go 1.65 points, or 0.23%, to 710.62. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was off 7.32 points, or 0.06%, to 12,598.51.

The bears have been running the show since the start of trading on news before the opening that jobless claims for the week ended March 29 increased 38,000 to 407,000, according to the U.S. Labor Department. Economists were expecting a smaller increase from the preceding week’s upwardly revised figure of 369,000.

Small-cap stocks stumbled but recovered and almost broke into positive territory at about 10 a.m. ET on news that the U.S. service sector contracted less than expected in March.
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