Early indications point to modest market gains on the last trading day of 2009. Thirty minutes before the opening bell on Wall Street, stock index futures suggest that the Dow Jones Industrial Average might add 10 or 15 points at the open.
Stock index futures are modestly higher after the latest weekly jobless claims numbers showed improvement. According to the Labor Department, filings for jobless benefits fell by 16,000 to 438,000 last week. Economists were looking for an increase to 460,000. The four week average fell to 15-month lows and continuing claims dipped below 5 million for the first time since February.
With no other economic data to guide the action and no significant stock news to report, there isn’t much else to guide the market action. End-of-year position squaring might be a factor, but trading is expected to be light ahead of the three-day weekend.
Meanwhile, bonds are taking a hit on the better-than-expected jobs data. The benchmark ten-year Treasury is off 10/32nd and yields 3.83 percent.
The dollar added .31 to 92.75 against the Japanese yen. The euro edged up .0042 to 1.4382 against the buck.
Crude oil is flat at $79.30 a barrel. Gold gained $8.50 to $1101 an ounce.