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Good morning. Here's what you need to know. - Overnight trading in Asia sent markets sharply higher, with Japan's Nikkei gaining 2.4 percent, hitting the highest level since the March 11 disaster. Europe is marginally higher in morning trading and U.S. futures point to a positive open.
- French consumer confidence surged surprisingly in March to levels not seen in more than a year. The key index advanced to 87 from 82. Meanwhile in Germany confidence is expected to decline for the first time in more than seven months, GfK said. The firm's survey fell 10 basis points to 5.9 for April.
- Retail sales stabilized in the United Kingdom this March, new data out of the Confederation of British Industries shows. A key gauge of sales moved to zero from -2. Economists had expected a decline to -5.
- Spain and Italy sold short-term debt this morning, both within targets the governments had set. Spain issued €2.588 billion in three- and six-month bills, with yields up on the longer notes. Italy sold €2.817 billion in two-year notes but saw its yield fall to 2.352 percent from 3.013 percent last month. Click here to see how the doomed Spanish financial sector illustrates the shortcomings of LTROs >
- Two energy companies are planning pipelines to move oil from Canada to refineries in the Gulf of Mexico, the Wall Street Journal's Tom Fowler reports. The separate projects from Enterprise Products Partners and Enbridge would transport up to 850,000 barrels of crude a day by 2014. Here's why the Keystone XL project is one of the most controversial in the U.S. >
- Chinese industrial profits fell 5.2 percent over the January-February period on weakness in petrochemicals, metals and auto firms. The last time there was a year-on-year decline of this magnitude was in 2009.
- Former IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn has been charged for "aggravated pimping" by French prosecutors. Strauss-Kahn is also being investigated for alleged involvement in a prostitution ring. He was ordered to pay €100,000 bail.
- U.S. economic announcements kick off at 9:00 a.m. with Case-Shiller home price data, which is expected to show a 0.3 percent decline in January. At 10:00 a.m. a reading of manufacturing activity by the Richmond Federal Reserve will be released. Economists polled by Bloomberg forecast continued expansion in the fifth federal district, even as the key business index falls two points to 18. Follow both reports live on Money Game.
- Earnings announcements are expected out of home builder Lennar and drugstore operator Walgreen today. Analysts are looking for earnings of $0.05 and $0.77 at Lennar and Walgreen, respectively.
- It's day two of hearings on the Affordable Care Act at the Supreme Court. Justices will hear arguments on the question: Is the individual mandate constitutional? This question represents the backbone of President Obama's healthcare law. Here's what happened on day one at the Supreme Court.
Bonus: Lindsay Lohan's final hearing with Judge Stefanie Sautner is still on schedule for this Thursday, after an alleged hit-and-run was mostly discounted by her probation officer.
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