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Is the Stock Market Open Today? Here Are the Hours for Christmas Eve.

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BRYAN R. SMITH/AFP/Getty Images

Americans are getting ready to celebrate Christmas as the U.S. continues to face the highly contagious Omicron variant, persistent inflation and labor shortages. 

But it’s not all doom and gloom.

The S&P 500 index closed up 0.6% on Thursday, and is up 25.8% so far this year. The index also climbed Tuesday and Wednesday, with gains spurred in part by strong economic data. Consumer confidence surged in December, which has helped ease investors’ concerns about the risks posed by Covid-19 and inflation.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 0.6% percent on Thursday, and has climbed 17.5% so far this year.

While many investors may be taking a break on Christmas Eve this Friday, others may be looking to trade. Here’s what you need to know about the markets.

Is the Stock Market Closed on Christmas Eve 2021?

The New York Stock Exchange and the Nasdaq will be closed on Christmas Eve. U.S. bond markets and U.S. over-the-counter markets will also be shut.

Are Foreign Stock Exchanges Open on Christmas Eve?

The London Stock Exchange closed at 12:30 p.m. local time on Thursday, and will remain closed Christmas Eve. The Toronto Stock Exchange will be open on Friday until 1 p.m. Eastern.

In Asia, the Hong Kong Stock Exchange is slated to close at noon local time on Christmas Eve. The Shanghai Stock Exchange and Tokyo Stock Exchange will be open regular hours.

How Are Retail Stocks Poised to Look This Christmas and Beyond?

While many people started holiday shopping early, November spending didn’t pick up as much as experts anticipated. But the outlook for the next few months is strong, analysts say.

Companies such as


Walmart

(ticker: WMT),


Costco Wholesale

(COST),


Target

(TGT) and


BJ’s Wholesale Club Holdings

(BJ) look well-positioned to deal with more consumers staying at home as they wait out the Omicron variant, Jefferies analyst Stephanie Wissink says. Next year could be the year of fashion catch-up, which she says may boost shares of


Macy’s

(M) and


Kohl’s

(KSS).

How Have Stocks Performed on Christmas Eve?

Excluding years when the market was closed on Christmas Eve, the S&P 500 has averaged a 0.2% gain on the occasion–which is higher than index’s daily average gain of 0.03%, according to Dow Jones Market Data. But the S&P 500’s average move on Christmas Eve is 0.48%, lower than its daily average move of 0.74%.

What about New Year’s Day and New Year’s Eve?

The New York Stock Exchange, the Nasdaq, and U.S. over-the-counter markets will be open regular hours on Friday, Dec. 31. However, U.S. bond markets will close early at 2 p.m. Eastern.

New Year’s Day 2022 falls on a Saturday. And while most global financial markets will be closed on Monday, Jan. 3, 2021, in observance of the holiday, U.S. markets will be open.

The lack of a New Year’s Day respite for stock traders is the result of NYSE Rule 7.2, which stipulates that the exchange will be closed either Friday or the following Monday if the holiday falls on a weekend, unless “unusual business conditions exist, such as the ending of a monthly or yearly accounting period.”

Write to Logan Moore at logan.moore@barrons.com

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Apple and Tesla Suppliers Hit By Global Energy Crisis. What to Know.

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A sign outside an Esso filling station informs the public that it has no fuel on Sept. 25, 2021 in London, England.


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A worldwide energy shortage is threatening to develop into a full-blown crisis.

The scenes in the U.K. over the weekend were reminiscent of the 1970s, as drivers queued at thousands of filling stations amid fears of a fuel shortage, sparked by a lack of truck drivers. But the panic at the pumps is really a sideshow. Natural-gas prices in Europe and around the world have skyrocketed amid shortages, leading to higher household bills and suppliers collapsing.

China is experiencing its own energy crunch as shortages have led to record coal prices and soaring natural-gas costs. It’s beginning to have an impact; production at a number of factories—including some supplying


Apple

and


Tesla

—has been halted.


Nomura

and


China International Capital Corp

have already downgraded Chinese growth forecasts as a result.

Meanwhile, oil prices and energy stocks are gaining early on Monday.


Goldman Sachs

raised its year-end Brent crude price forecast to $90 from $80, also lifting its West Texas Intermediate forecast to $87. Most notably, the bank’s analysts said Hurricane Ida should prove to be “the most bullish hurricane in U.S. history.” They added that the global oil supply-demand deficit is larger than they expected, with the recovery in demand from the Delta coronavirus variant impact faster than anticipated. Throw in the global gas shortage and winter oil demand is firmly skewed to the upside, they said.

The bigger question is whether the energy disruptions will derail the economic recovery or not. In any case, for all the talk of a green energy transition, the unfolding events show the economy is still very much powered by traditional fossil fuels.

Callum Keown

***Join Barron’s senior managing editor Lauren R. Rublin and deputy editor Ben Levisohn today at noon to discuss the outlook for financial markets, industry sectors, and individual stocks. Sign up here.

***

In Congress This Week: Debt Ceiling, Infrastructure Spending

Congress faces several major initiatives this week, including Monday’s Senate vote on federal government funding and the debt ceiling, a House vote on the $1 trillion bipartisan infrastructure bill later this week, and ongoing negotiations on the $3.5 trillion bill Democrats expect to pass by reconciliation.

  • House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said the first priority is to avert a government shutdown on Oct. 1. Senate Republicans vowed to block a vote on the House-approved bill to extend government funding through Dec. 3 and suspend the debt limit until late next year.
  • An alternative is to pass a short-term government funding extension—something Republicans could support—and address the debt ceiling in the $3.5 trillion bill, which is focused on President Joe Biden’s social spending and climate change agenda.
  • Pelosi told ABC’s “This Week” that the House will pass the $1 trillion infrastructure bill this week. She also said it’s “self-evident” the $3.5 trillion bill will get smaller during negotiations. Even some Democrats oppose the bill’s size.
  • Pelosi said that despite clashes over details, Democrats “overwhelmingly” support Biden’s economic agenda, including lowering middle class taxes, measures to fight climate change, and tax rises on corporations and the wealthy to pay for it.

What’s Next: The House voted to suspend the debt limit through December 2022, but Republicans want to absolve themselves of the matter, saying Democrats pushed through $1.9 trillion in spending without GOP votes this spring. Democrats say raising the debt limit should be a bipartisan effort, as it was in the past.

Janet H. Cho

***

German Elections Leave No Clear Winner to Succeed Merkel

Germany’s Social Democrats seemed to have won a narrow plurality of votes in Sunday’s parliamentary election, but months of tough negotiations with other smaller parties lie ahead for a coalition government to be formed.

  • Olaf Scholz, the current finance minister and Social Democratic candidate for chancellor, led his SPD party to a 26% victory, according to the latest results. He said he would now attempt to form a government before Christmas with the Green and the Liberal parties, which received 15% and 11.5% of the votes, respectively.
  • Angela Merkel will step down when her successor is appointed. Her conservative party only received 24% of the vote, its worst-ever election result. But conservative candidate Armin Laschet nonetheless hinted he might also try to form a government supported by a majority of the Bundestag, the lower house of Parliament.
  • The various parties have different stances on taxes, fiscal policy, the green transition and economic reforms, so analysts think workable compromises will take weeks, if not months, of tough bargaining.

What’s Next: One of the first results of the election might be that Merkel’s 16-year rule is extended until the end of the year. And that the SPD, if Scholz becomes chancellor, will have to row back on some of its proposals on taxes, and the way to finance the fight against climate change.

Pierre Briançon

***

Chinese Agencies Take Steps to Shield Consumer Funds from Evergrande Crisis

Local governments in China are taking control of


Evergrande
’s
property sales revenue amid an unfolding liquidity crisis at the developer, the Financial Times reported. Stalled development projects this summer sparked complaints and public protests.

  • In a district near Guangzhou, a housing agency asked an Evergrande subsidiary to put presale proceeds from the stalled Sunshine Peninsula residential development into a state-owned custodia account, the report said.
  • An agency in Zhuhai, near Macau, also asked Evergrande to put sales revenue in a government account. As many as eight other provinces have asked Evergrande, since August, to put presale revenue into custodial accounts as it put hundreds of unfinished developments on hold.
  • Evergrande has $300 billion in debt, including $20 billion held offshore. Last week, Evergrande missed a payment on $2 billion of debt, reports said. Separating presale revenue prevents it from being used for debt payments.
  • Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell has said China is highly levered for a developing economy but that there isn’t a lot of derelict U.S. exposure to Evergrande debt.

What’s Next: Wall Street is worried how an Evergrande failure would affect markets. Property contributes a quarter of China’s economic activity and is a major source of household wealth there. A drop in property prices could hurt consumer confidence and worsen China’s economic slowdown.

Liz Moyer

***

Congestion at Busiest U.S. Ports Causing Shipping Delays Nationwide

The busiest U.S. ports at Los Angeles and Long Beach, Calif., are experiencing unprecedented backlogs, with thousands of shipping containers to move and more than 60 ships waiting to dock, contributing to shipping delays nationwide, The Wall Street Journal reported.

  • Shipping demands have increased as businesses replenish their pandemic-depleted inventory, but supply shortages are worsening at apparel maker


    Nike
    ,
    and retailer


    Costco
    ,
    which is limiting paper towel sales.

  • Unlike ports in Asia and Europe that are open around the clock, U.S. ports operate in two shifts on weekdays, because overnight or Saturday shipping is more expensive. Trucking companies are short of drivers to haul boxes, or to load or unload containers from freight trains.
  • In the U.K., thousands of gas stations ran dry Sunday and supermarket shelves were sparsely stocked after a truck driver shortage delayed the delivery of fuel and groceries. The government will issue 5,000 temporary visas for foreign drivers. The British Retail Consortium called it “too little, too late.”
  • To attract more supply-chain workers, logistics providers are raising pay, increasing shift flexibility, and bringing in robots to help with surging e-commerce volumes.


    Walmart
    ,


    Amazon

    and


    United Parcel Service

    are offering signing bonuses, including college tuition help.

What’s Next: Worker shortages are speeding up automation in what were largely manual warehouse and fulfillment operations.


GXO Logistics

added 40% more robotics and automation systems in North America in 2021, with plans to open nine new automated U.S. sites this year for e-commerce.

Janet H. Cho

***

WHO Reviving Investigation Into Origins of Covid-19 With New Scientists

The World Health Organization is reviving its investigation into the origins of Covid-19, which has killed more than 4.7 million people worldwide, assembling a new team of about 20 scientists to search for new clues in China and elsewhere before critical evidence disappears.

  • The U.S. and its allies have urged the WHO to proceed with the investigation, while China has argued that new inquiries should focus on other countries. A previous WHO-led inquiry that visited Wuhan, China, said data from Chinese scientists could not determine when, where and how the virus began.
  • Previous WHO-led teams urged their Chinese counterparts to analyze blood banks, test farmworkers, and study the earliest cases. China and its allies say the investigation should scrutinize other possible sources such as Italy, or a U.S. military bioresearch facility in Fort Detrick, Md.
  • Columbia University professor Jeffrey Sachs disbanded a task force of scientists investigating the origins of Covid-19, saying its links to the nonprofit EcoHealth Alliance risked perceptions of bias, because it used U.S. funds to study bat coronaviruses with the Wuhan Institute of Virology.
  • Demand for and questions about boosters have increased since the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommended them for people 65 and older, those with underlying medical conditions, and those at higher risk of infection who received the


    Pfizer


    BioNTech

    vaccine. More than 2.6 million Americans have received boosters.

What’s Next: New York Gov. Kathy Hochul may bring in the National Guard and out-of-state medical workers to fill hospital staffing shortages, as thousands of unvaccinated workers could lose their jobs with Monday’s mandated healthcare worker Covid vaccination deadline looming.

Janet H. Cho

***

MarketWatch Wants to Hear From You

My 76-year-old mother recently moved into assisted living, and she may need to sell her house to cover her expenses. Is there something we can do now to reduce the capital gains on the house in the future, should she outlive her savings?

A MarketWatch correspondent will answer this question soon. Meanwhile, send any questions you would like answered to thebarronsdaily@barrons.com.

***

—Newsletter edited by Liz Moyer, Camilla Imperiali, Steve Goldstein, Rupert Steiner

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Amazon to Hire 125,000 Workers With Average Starting Pay at $18 an Hour

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The logo of Amazon at a distribution center.


Ina Fassbender/AFP via Getty Images


Amazon.com

is hiring more than 125,000 drivers and warehouse workers and will pay them a starting average wage of more than $18 an hour —and up to $22.50 in some places, the internet retailer announced Tuesday.

The jobs will be both part time and full time, and in all regions of the country—from Arizona and Indiana to New Jersey and Florida.

Workers in certain locations also will get a sign-on bonus of up to $3,000, which shows just how competitive the job market is. Amazon (ticker: AMZN) didn’t specify the locations where either the bonus or the higher wage will be paid.

Amazon now pays one of the highest minimum wages—if not the highest—by a U.S. retailer. In 2018, the tech giant established a minimum wage of $15 an hour, more than double the federal minimum wage of $7.25.

In the past few years, other retailers and consumer-based companies have raised their minimum wages. This year alone,

Walmart

(WMT),

Costco Wholesale

(COST),

Chipotle Mexican Grill

(CMG), and

McDonald’s

(MCD) have increased their starting pay.

Amazon let one of its warehouse workers in Miami speak to the benefits of its higher pay.

“Before Amazon, I was at a car wash making $9 an hour. Then I came to Amazon and I started earning $15 an hour—it was life-changing for me,” said Leonardo, who the company didn’t identify by his last name.

Amazon is on a hiring spree. At the beginning of September, the company announced it will fill 40,000 corporate and technology jobs; since the pandemic began in March 2020, Amazon has hired more than 450,000 people in the U.S.  

Tuesday’s announcement ties in with its offer last week to pay 100% of college tuition for more than 750,000 U.S. employees.

Also read: This Robot Trader Just Turned Bullish on Amazon, Facebook and Nvidia. Here’s What It Sold.

Amazon shares closed down 0.21%, to $3,450, on Tuesday. The stock has gained almost 6% so far this year and has risen 9.3% over the past 12 months, lagging the

S&P 500’s

18% and 31% gains over the same periods.

Write to editors@barrons.com

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