STOCKS JUMP TO RECORD HIGHS: Here's what you need to know

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Stocks once again hit record all-time highs on a
holiday-shortened trading day.

All three indexes ticked up slightly, but oil slid after reports
Saudi Arabia may not attend the next OPEC meeting. The bond
market was closed all day for the Thanksgiving holiday.

We’ve got the headlines from the short day, but first, the
scoreboard:

  • Dow: 19,138.07, +54.89, (+0.29%)
  • S&P 500: 2,210.66, +5.97, (+0.27%)
  • Nasdaq: 5,392.70, +12.11, (+0.23%)
  • WTI crude oil: $46.28, -$1.71, (-3.56%)

  1. Saudi Arabia may not show up to the next OPEC meeting.
    A
    report from Reuters said that the nation is planning to skip
    next week’s meeting of the oil cartel in Vienna. There is
    optimism going into the meeting that the countries could agree
    to a production freeze.

  2. Black Friday kicks off the holiday shopping season.
    The
    National Retail Foundation expects Americans to spend $655.8
    billion in November and December, an increase from last year.

  3. South Africa had its outlook cut by credit rating agency
    Fitch.
    The agency affirmed the country’s BBB- grade, but
    cited political uncertainty as a possible issue. Following the
    news, the country’s currency, the rand, slipped against the US
    dollar.

  4. Johnson & Johnson is thinking about buying Actelion.

    The Swedish drugmaker has a market cap of roughly $19 billion.
    Actelion confirmed Johnson & Johnson’s interest on Friday.

  5. Markit services PMI slipped in November.
    The measure of the
    US service sector ticked down to 54.7, just shy of the 54.8
    expected by economists.

ADDITIONALLY:


Paul Krugman on manufacturing employment


A $19 billion hedge fund is pushing into a fresh corner of the
credit market

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