
The futures contracts signaling on a stable opening of the trading day at the US stock markets.

The futures contracts signaling on a stable opening of the trading day at the US stock markets.

The trading on Wall Street is conducted so far today with volatility on the background of falling prices in Europe.
Case-Shiller index. which examines the change in housing prices in 20 major US cities showed a rise of 5%, in line with expectations.

The leading indices in Wall street stock markets closed the trading day yesterday with declines after a black day of Deutsche Bank which worries the global markets.
The S&P 500, Dow Jones and Nasdaq fell by 0.9% and recorded their sharpest decline in almost two weeks.

U.S. New-Home Sales Fell by 7.6% in August
The sales of newly built homes pulled back in August after surging the prior month, which is a possible sign of weakening momentum across the U.S. housing sector.

The futures contracts on Wall Street signaling on a steady opening to today’s trading, with a minimal decline of 0.1% in the leading indices.

The trading on Wall Street closed higher for the third day in a row, while the Nasdaq rose by 0.8% to a record level of all-time.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose by 0.5%, led by shares of Boeing (131.87 1.00%) which rose by 1%, and S&P 500 by 0.6%, as the real estate segment increased by 2%.

Initial Jobless Claims in U.S. matched the lowest level since April.
It is a sign that the labor market remains healthy even as hiring moderates.
The jobless claims declined by 8,000 to 252,000 in the week ended Sept. 17, and It was the largest drop since early July.

The futures contracts indices on Wall Street are signaling of a rise of 0.3% with the opening of trading in the US today.

Oil data:
The Energy Data Manager reported that US oil inventories fell last week by 6.2 million barrels to 504.6 million barrels.
The market forecast was for a rise of 2.8 million barrels.

The European stock markets opened the trading this morning with rises, following the interest rate of the Bank of Japan, and ahead of US interest rate decision later tonight.
Most analysts give a relatively small chance of a interest rate rise today, according to most forecasts the Fed will choose to operate only in December, after the US presidential election.