本帖最后由 aimei 于 2012-11-12 10:06 编辑
The news out of China (trade, exports reaching a five-month high) and Greece is positive and may overshadow the fiscal-cliff fear,” said Peter Cardillo, chief market economist at Rockwell Global Capital.
“However, today’s volume is likely to be lighter than usual due to the Veterans Day festivity. We are looking for a mixed to steady session,” he said in emailed comments.
U.S. stocks are expected to zigzag this week, with negotiations over automatic spending reductions, and whether the U.S. will go over the so-called fiscal cliff, the chief concern of investors. Read: U.S. stocks to follow erratic 'fiscal cliff' path
Wall Street stocks finished with modest gains last Friday but the S&P 500 and SPX +0.17% Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA +0.03% indexes suffered their worst week since June 1 as measured by weekly percentage drops, down 2.1% and 2.4%, respectively. Read: Current drop echoes 1987 crash prelude |