Rush Limbaugh
Weekdays, Noon - 3pm

Text Us: #30930
Phone: (800) 616 WBEN
Business: (716) 843-0600
| More
Jun 18, 9:01 AM EDT

Futures rising as Fed gathers in Washington

AP Photo
AP Photo/Richard Drew
Business Video
Latest Market News
Waiting for word from Bernanke, stocks move higher

Hormel, Gevo, Suntech are big movers

News Summary: Russell 2000 is oh so close to 1,000

Tribune ends bankruptcy stint with lower earnings

Smithfield Foods' 4Q profit falls 63 percent

H&R Block 4Q profit rises, but misses Street view

United Tech CFO says Europe a drag on 2013 revenue

DuPont dampens 2013 net income expectations

News Summary: DuPont points to lower guidance

Buy AP Photo Reprints
Interactives
Greece's Debt Threatens to Spread
State budget
gaps map
Auto industry problems trickle down, punish Tennessee county
Women give old Derby hats a makeover in tough economy
S.C. town deals with highest unemployment in South
How mortgages were bundled and sold as securities
Tracking the $700 billion financial bailout
Tracking the year's job losses
State-by-state foreclosures since 2007
Credit crisis explained
Presidents and their economic legacies
Lexicon of the financial crisis
Americans' addiction to debt
Interactive
Are Stocks Bouncing Back?

NEW YORK (AP) -- U.S. stock futures rose for the second time in as many days as the Federal Reserve opens its two-day policy meeting in Washington.

The government also reported Tuesday that the pace of construction increased again in May as builders tried to keep up with growing demand for houses.

Dow Jones industrial futures rose 32 points to 15,153. The broader S&P futures tacked on 3.4 points to 1,637.10. Nasdaq futures gained 10.25 points to 2,975.

Housing starts increased 6.8 percent last month to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 914,000 following a sharp decline in April. But new construction remains below the million-home pace of March, the highest level in five years.

Shares of the nation's biggest homebuilders rose before the market opened.

The Labor Department also reported Tuesday that inflation has been held in check. Rising energy costs were partly offset by cheaper food, and the consumer price index ticked up a seasonally adjusted 0.1 percent last month.

It was just the second increase in seven months.

© 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Learn more about our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.

Poll
How long do you think the Corasanti jury will deliberate before reaching verdicts?
  Hours.
  A day or two.
  Several days.
 
View Results

Get it Now

WBEN iPhone App

Perks

Contests

Photo Galleries

RSS Center