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Claire Caldwell

Bronco Drilling, LMI Aerospace and Men's Wearhouse lead small-cap percentage gainers

Bronco Drilling Co Inc. (Nasdaq:BRNC), LMI Aerospace Inc. (Nasdaq:LMIA) and Men's Wearhouse Inc. (Nasdaq:MW) are among the biggest percentage gainers in Thursday's trading among companies with market capitalizations under $1 billion.

Also included among the results: National Western Life Insurance Co. (Nasdaq:NWLI), Santander Bancorp (Nasdaq:SBP), Hanesbrands Inc. (Nasdaq:HBI), Steak n Shake Company (Nasdaq:SNS), Hexcel Corp. (Nasdaq:HXL) and Hingham Institution for Savings (Nasdaq:HIFS).
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Claire Caldwell

Zion Oil and Gas, Astoria Financial and Hanesbrands lead small-cap percentage gainers

Zion Oil and Gas Inc. (Nasdaq:ZN), Astoria Financial Corp. (Nasdaq:AF) and Hanesbrands Inc. (Nasdaq:HBI) are among the biggest percentage gainers in Thursday's trading among companies with market capitalizations under $1 billion.

Also included among the results: Cogent Communications Group Inc. (Nasdaq:CCOI), DineEquity Inc. (Nasdaq:DIN), Greif Inc. (Nasdaq:GEF), ACI Worldwide Inc. (Nasdaq:ACIW), Willbros Group Inc. (Nasdaq:WG) and Western Alliance Bancorp (Nasdaq:WAL).
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SCI Microbloggers

Small caps rally on Fed comments; HIFN, RMBS and UNFI lead gainers

The Russell 2000 (NYSE:IWM) rallied nearly 5% today after Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke said the recession may end in 2009. Some of today’s small-cap gainers were Hifn, Inc. (Nasdaq:HIFN), Rambus (Nasdaq:RMBS) and United Natural Foods (Nasdaq:UNFI).

Other Market Watch highlights today included:

• The Consumer Confidence Index plunged more than 12 points in February to 25, from 37.4 last month, and far below the predicted 35.5 level.
• The Standard & Poor's/Case-Shiller U.S. National Home Price Index released horrid data today showing a plung of more than 18% during the quarter from the prior-year period. This is the largest drop in its 21-year history.
• The Federal Housing Finance Agency also said today that home prices dropped more than 8 percent in the quarter from a year earlier, its largest annual decline on record since 1991.
• Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke spoke to Congress, pledged to use all available tools to lift the country out of the recession.
• Bernanke said the U.S. economy will probably keep shrinking in the first six months of the 2009, but is hopeful that the recession will end this year. 
• The Russell 2000 closed up 17.90, or 4.54%, to 412.48.
• The Dow rose more than 230 points, or 3.3%, to 7,350.94; S&P 500 closed about 4% to 773.14.
• For the year, the Russell is now down 17.41%, while the Dow has is down 16.24% and the S&P 500 is down 14.4%.

Small Cap Gainers:

• Exar Corporation signs definitive agreement to acquire Hifn, Inc. Shares of HIFN rocket 62% at closing. See (Nasdaq:HIFN).
• High Court denies FTC antitrust review of Rambus, sending shares 40% higher. See (Nasdaq:RMBS).
• United Natural Foods climbed 20% after posting higher Q2 earnings, updating FY09 forecast. See (Nasdaq:UNFI).

Small Cap Losers:

• Heartland Payment Systems guided below estimates, shares tumbled 30%. See (NYSE:HPY).
• RadioShack fell 24% today after seeing a 39% Q4 net drop on falling margins, sales. See (NYSE:RSH).
• Apparel small-cap Hanesbrands was down 7% after announcing it will review its long-term growth strategies, capital structure and the 2009 business environment. See (NYSE:HBI).

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Claire Caldwell

LaBarge, Hanesbrands and Chiquita Brands International among 52-week lows

LaBarge Inc. (Nasdaq:LB), Hanesbrands Inc. (Nasdaq:HBI) and Chiquita Brands International Inc. (Nasdaq:CQB) are among the new 52-week lows in Tuesday's trading among companies with market capitalizations under $1 billion.

Also included among the results: Imperial Sugar Co. (Nasdaq:IPSU), MI Developments Inc. (Nasdaq:MIM), St Mary Land & Exploration Co. (Nasdaq:SM), Northrim BanCorp Inc. (Nasdaq:NRIM), Jackson Hewitt Tax Service Inc (Nasdaq:JTX) and Bank of Marin Bancorp (Nasdaq:BMRC).
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Claire Caldwell

Omnicell, Cash America International and Hancock Holding lead small-cap percentage losers

Omnicell Inc. (Nasdaq:OMCL), Cash America International Inc. (Nasdaq:CSH) and Hancock Holding Co. (Nasdaq:HBHC) are among the biggest percentage losers in Wednesday's trading among companies with market capitalizations under $1 billion.

Also included among the results: VSE Corp. (Nasdaq:VSEC), Hanesbrands Inc. (Nasdaq:HBI), BioSpecifics Technologies Corp. (Nasdaq:BSTC), First Citizens Bancorp Cleveland (Nasdaq:FCZA), Eagle Bancorp Inc. (Nasdaq:EGBN) and Dynamic Materials Corp. (Nasdaq:BOOM).
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Kevin Pendley

Lower start after unemployment claims rise to 26-year peak

A bleak picture of the nation’s employment picture sparked a solid opening decline for small-cap stocks. Bearish momentum was furthered by a batch of weak profit reports and outlooks for various companies, but another firm tone in commodities offered up support. At 9:57 a.m. ET, the Russell 2000 (NYSE:IWM) was down 4.03, or 0.85%, at 472.37.

The weekly unemployment claims report headline figure came in at 573,000, which swamped the forecast of 525,000 and which was a cycle high so far in the economic malaise. What’s more, it also marked the highest claims number in 26 years. Even more scary is that the number of continuing claims, which tracks people who are out of work and just can’t get a job, rose to 4.429 million, way above the 4.1 million forecast and the highest point since November 1974. It has been fashionable to rally on “bad” economic news lately amid ideas that the market will be forward looking and rally away from the lows long before the news bottoms out, but it is difficult to look past numbers as bad as today’s claims report – especially if you don’t see things getting better for some time to come.

“Although the labor force is much larger now that it was 25 years ago, the number of people actually covered by unemployment insurance has declined substantially,” Steven Wood, chief economist with Insight Economics, said in an email. “More importantly, the deterioration in initial claims, continuing claims, and the insured jobless rate has been as bad as they were during the 1981-1982 recession, which was the most severe in the post-World War II period. Although these data are not for the survey week, they suggest another substantial decline in payroll employment and another jump in the unemployment rate for December.”

The International Trade report also came out this morning and the deficit widened to $57.19 billion, well above the forecast for a deficit of $53.5 billion. The U.S. dollar extended overnight losses against the euro after the report, with the . . .

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