Porsche aims to end Magna's Boxster contract: source
STUTTGART (Reuters) - Germany's Porsche
Stock futures signal losses; HP eyed
(Reuters) - U.S. stock index futures pointed to a lower opening on Wall Street on Tuesday, following the previous session's sharp gains, with futures for the S&P 500 down 0.18 percent, Dow Jones futures down 0.26 percent and Nasdaq 100 futures down 0.38 percent at 0925 GMT (4:25 a.m. EST). Hewlett-Packard Co
GM pays back Germany, signals fewer job cuts
DUESSELDORF/BERLIN (Reuters) - General Motors
Western Coal says aware of potential lawsuit in Ontario
LONDON (Reuters) - Western Coal Corp
Manulife to buy China fund manager stake
TORONTO (Reuters) - Canada's top life insurer Manulife Financial Corp
Ciena beats NSN to buy Nortel's businesses for $769 mln
HELSINKI/NEW YORK (Reuters) - Ciena Corp
N.Y. sentencing of Canadian insider trader delayed
NEW YORK (Reuters) - A Canadian attorney behind what U.S. prosecutors describe as the largest insider trading scheme in Canadian history was denied entry to the United States and could not be sentenced on Monday. Canadian Stanko Grmovsek admitted in a Toronto court earlier this year to making $9 million with a law school friend in a 14-year illegal scheme, including laundering money by gambling wads of cash on games such as blackjack in Las Vegas's world-famous casino strip.
Gold eases, investors take profits after record
TOKYO (Reuters) - Gold eased on Tuesday as investors took profits from the previous day's record high, but sentiment was underpinned by a weak dollar. Traders said gold may slide as low as $1,145-$1,150 in a near-term correction, but the market was bound to recover given supportive factors such as the weak dollar, expectations for low U.S. interest rates and bullish sentiment after gold purchases by some central banks.
TSX end higher on resource issues, banks
TORONTO (Reuters) - Toronto's main stock index pared early gains but ended higher on Monday, touching its highest level in nearly 14 months as an early rally in oil prices powered energy stocks, while financials gained ground ahead of a flood of bank earnings reports. Despite a late retreat by oil prices -- which ended marginally higher after being up as much as $2 a barrel -- the energy sector closed up 0.71 percent.
Bank worries, profit-taking hits stocks
LONDON (Reuters) - Financial markets did a quick about-face from the previous session's patterns on Tuesday with stocks falling, the dollar recovering some losses and gold dropping back a bit from record highs. Investors were generally taking profits from Monday's stock rally, which saw U.S. blue chips gain 1.3 percent and European shares 2 percent.
© Reuters Limited. All Rights Reserved.
Reproduction or redistribution of Reuters content, including framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters. Reuters shall not be liable for any errors or delays in the content, or for any actions taken in reliance thereon.

