YAHOO [BRIEFING.COM]: The major averages began the day on a down note and continued declining for the first two hours of the session. As the S&P 500 reached its lows, Congressional leaders held a press conference regarding the progress of fiscal cliff negotiations. During the public statement, Senator Harry Reid said that officials would not wait until the last day of December, and could agree on the framework for a deal prior to the deadline. The remarks helped the indices surge to session highs, where they spent the majority of the afternoon. The S&P 500 built on its gains and finished higher by 0.5%.

High-yielding telecom stocks continued seeing weakness as the country nears the fiscal cliff. Morning reports indicated the White House is considering a package which would delay the mandatory spending cuts scheduled to go into effect on January 1, 2013. However, this was received as a delay of the decision, rather than a step towards a concrete solution. The telecommunications sector slid 0.6% and
AT&T (T 33.14, -0.28), Sprint Nextel (S 5.48, -0.06), and Verizon (VZ 41.40, -0.30) all lost between 0.7% and 1.1%.

Among technology stocks,
Apple (AAPL 527.68, +2.06) registered a gain of 0.4% as the stock attempts to recover from recent softness.

A handful of notable technology companies have reported earnings since yesterday's close.
Dell (DELL 8.86, -0.70) settled lower by 7.3% after missing on earnings and revenue. During the third quarter, the computer manufacturer saw its top line decline 10.7% year-over-year, to $13.72 billion. In addition, the company issued downside fourth quarter revenue guidance and reaffirmed its full-year 2013 earnings expectations.

Meanwhile,
Applied Materials (AMAT 10.15, -0.15) reported strong results, but issued cautious guidance. The semiconductor manufacturer earned $0.06 on $1.65 billion in revenue, which beat the Capital IQ consensus estimates. However, forward guidance was a point of concern as the company expects first quarter earnings and revenue below consensus.

Lastly,
Autodesk (ADSK 31.48, +0.98) rose by 3.2% after reporting mixed earnings. The software provider's earnings exceeded estimates by $0.04, while its revenue of $548 million fell short of estimates. Similar to Applied Materials, Autodesk is cautious about its upcoming quarter as it expects earnings and revenue to miss consensus estimates.

Looking at the financial sector, the
SPDR Financial Select Sector ETF (XLF 15.28, +0.10) added 0.7%. Even though the proxy ETF traded ahead of the broader market, major financials were mixed. JPMorgan Chase (JPM 39.53, +0.14) added 0.4% after reaching a settlement with the Securities and Exchange Commission regarding Bear Stearns and JPMorgan residential mortgage-backed securities. As part of the settlement, JPMorgan will pay approximately $297 million in penalties. Credit Suisse (CS 21.94, -0.43) was also named in the settlement and will pay approximately $120 million in fines. Looking at other majors, Citigroup (C 34.98, -0.23) slid 0.7% while Wells Fargo (WFC 31.94, +0.37) outperformed with a gain of 1.2%.

The Dow Jones Transportation Average underperformed the industrial average and settled lower by 0.5%. Out of the five airlines which are part of the transportation average, four saw notable losses.
Delta Air Lines (DAL 9.33, -0.16) fell 1.7%, and JetBlue Airways (JBLU 4.96, -0.07) lost 1.4%. Meanwhile, Southwest Airlines (LUV 8.93, +0.09) outperformed and added 1.0%. As 17 out of 20 transportation stocks settled lower, two listings connected to the trucking industry saw strength. JB Hunt (JBHT 59.32, +0.22) and Ryder System (R 44.22, +0.45) added 0.4% and 1.0%, respectively.

Casino stocks were broadly stronger after
Penn National Gaming (PENN 48.23, +10.62) announced plans to split its real estate and gaming assets into two separate companies. Under the new structure, a newly-established PropCo will be the first real investment trust focused solely on gaming. Penn National surged 28.2% while peers Ameristar Casinos (ASCA 19.52, +2.67), Pinnacle Entertainment (PNK 12.65, +0.84), and Las Vegas Sands (LVS 42.27, +1.71) all gained between 4.2% and 15.9%.

In economic news, the September net long-term TIC flows report indicated a $3.3 billion inflow of foreign capital into U.S. denominated assets. This follows the prior month's $90.0 billion inflow.

Industrial production decreased during October by 0.4%, which was worse than the 0.1% increase that had been expected by the Briefing.com consensus. The reading follows the revised 0.2% increase recorded during the prior month. Capacity utilization hit 77.8%, which was worse than the 78.3% expected by the Briefing.com consensus, and down from the revised prior month reading of 78.2%.

On Monday, investors will digest the October existing home sales report and November NAHB Housing Market Index. Both figures will be reported at 10:00 ET.

Week in Review: Markets Continue Retreating Amid Fiscal Cliff Worries

Stocks began Monday's session on a higher note. However, the S&P 500 followed the early strength with a slide into the red. After hovering near its lows for little over an hour, the index staged a steady climb towards fresh highs. The benchmark average followed the early afternoon strength with another slide towards its flat line, where it remained until the end of the day. The day's volume was well below average and the bond market was closed in observance of Veterans Day.
Titanium Metals (TIE 16.61, +0.11) surged 42.6% after being acquired by Precision Castparts (PCP 174.05, -0.23) for $16.50 per share.

On Tuesday, equities started the session on a lower note. However, the major averages followed the lower open with a steady climb towards session highs. The optimism held the S&P 500 near the 1385 level for the majority of the session, before late day selling pushed it back into the red. As a result the benchmark average settled lower by 0.4%.
Home Depot (HD 62.12, +0.87) rose by 3.6% after reporting upbeat earnings and issuing upside guidance.

Wednesday's session opened higher, but the early strength did not hold past the opening minutes. The S&P 500 marked its session best shortly after the open, and headed lower. The morning slide was accompanied by headlines out of the Middle East which indicated Israeli forces have killed two top Hamas officials in an operation dubbed "Pillar of Defense." After the first-hour slide, the benchmark average held near the 1365 level until President Obama held a press conference to further discuss the fiscal cliff. During his remarks, the commander-in-chief said he is "hoping for compromise and hoping for new ideas." The president's statements failed to inspire investor confidence, thus resulting in an afternoon sell-off which saw the S&P 500 settle lower by 1.4%.
Abercrombie & Fitch (ANF 40.87, -0.88) gained 34.5% after reporting strong quarterly results.

Crude oil advanced during today's floor session on heightened Israel and Hamas tensions and a fire on an energy platform in the Gulf of Mexico. Despite a stronger dollar index, the energy component climbed as high as $87.39 per barrel and settled slightly below that level at $86.96 per barrel, booking a gain of 0.5% for the week.

Natural gas trended higher in positive territory after coming off its session low of $3.71 per MMBtu set moments after floor trade opened. It closed at $3.79 per MMBtu, or just below its session high of $3.80 per MMBtu for a weekly gain of 8.3%.

Gold see-sawed between positive and negative territory as the stronger dollar index put pressure on the yellow metal. It slid off its pit session high of $1716.80 per ounce and touched a session low of $1707.50 per ounce in morning action. Gold spent the remainder of pit trade working on erasing losses and managed to close just above the unchanged level at $1714.80 per ounce. Despite the slight gain, gold booked a 0.9% loss for the week.

Silver struggled in the red during its entire floor session. It touched a session high of $32.60 per ounce but quickly fell to a session low of $32.01 per ounce. Efforts to erase losses were unsuccessful, and silver settled the week 0.8% lower at $32.37 per ounce.


On Thursday, stocks showed indecision in the early going as trade hovered around the flat line for the first 90 minutes. The S&P 500 followed the initial choppiness with a slide to a session low near 1350. The level provided some support for the benchmark index which managed to cross into positive territory before sellers retook control and drove it back down to session lows. However, the average received a considerable bid in the final minutes of the trading day and ended with a loss of 0.2%.
Apple (AAPL 527.68, +2.06) slid 2.1% to extend its recent weakness.DJ30 +45.93 NASDAQ +16.19 SP500 +6.55 NASDAQ Adv/Vol/Dec 1448/2.12 bln/999 NYSE Adv/Vol/Dec 2281/948.6 mln/800