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10 things you need to know before the opening bell

Jonathan Garber   

10 things you need to know before the opening bell
Stock Market3 min read

Kim Jong Un

Reuters/KCNA KCNA

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, left, and senior Chinese Communist Party official Liu Yunshan during celebration of the 70th anniversary of the founding of the ruling Workers' Party of Korea.

Here is what you need to know.

Dell bought EMC in one of the largest tech deals of all time. Dell announced it had purchased EMC for about $67 billion, or $33.15 per share, a roughly 28% premium from Friday's closing price. "The combination of Dell and EMC creates an enterprise-solutions powerhouse bringing our customers industry-leading innovation across their entire technology environment," Michael Dell said.

AB InBev is considering upping its offer for SABMiller. Bloomberg reports that Anheuser-Busch InBev is considering raising its offer for SABMiller to about $66 a share (£43) before the Wednesday deadline for a final offer. Last week, SABMiller rejected InBev's offer of £42.15. SABMiller chairman Jan du Plessis said the offer "significantly undervalued" the company.

Ferrari's IPO values it at just under $10 billion. Ferrari's initial public offering of 17 million shares will value the company at approximately $9.8 billion. The offering is said to price Ferrari's stock at $48 to $52 per share, raising $894 million. Ferrari will trade on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker RACE.

Glencore plans to sell mines to raise cash. Glencore is planning to sell copper mines in Australia and Chile after "receiving a number of unsolicited expressions of interest for these mines from various potential buyers." The sale of the mines will help the company reduce its $100 billion in liabilities.

Infosys posted a strong quarter. According to MoneyControl, the IT-services behemoth announced "profit increased 12.1% sequentially to Rs 3,398 crore," or $524.5 million, "and rupee revenue by 8.9% to Rs 15,635 crore," or $2.4 billion. The strong quarter lost some of its luster, however, as CFO Rajiv Bansal announced his resignation. Additionally, the company said its employee stock-offering program could dilute ownership by as much as 2% going forward.

Stanley Fischer says a Fed rate hike isn't guaranteed by the end of the year. The Fed's No. 2 man told a group at the International Monetary Fund meetings in Peru that a 2015 rate hike by the Fed was "an expectation, not a commitment." According to Reuters, Fischer suggested that the Fed was still evaluating the data and that "considerable uncertainties" clouded the US' economic outlook. The market is pricing in a 10% probability of an October rate hike and a 38.8% chance of a December move.

China's yuan is the strongest it has been in two months. On Monday, the Chinese yuan strengthened to 6.3235 per dollar. The yuan hasn't been this strong since the Chinese central bank, the People's Bank of China, announced consecutive devaluations in August. The yuan hit a four-year low of 6.4489 per dollar on August 12.

Stock markets around the world trade mixed. Britain's FTSE (-0.5%) leads the way lower in Europe after China's Shanghai Composite (+3.3%) paced the advance in Asia. S&P 500 futures are flat at 2,007.50.

US economic data is absent. The economic calendar is clean in observance of Columbus Day. The US Treasury market is closed and will reopen on Tuesday.

Earnings season picks up on Tuesday. Fastenal and Johnson & Johnson are scheduled to report ahead of Tuesday's opening bell, and CSX, Intel, and JPMorgan Chase are set to release their quarterly results after Tuesday's close.

NOW WATCH: Fed's Bullard explains the problem with keeping rates at zero forever

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