Finance

10 things you need to know before the opening bell (SPY, SPX, QQQ, DIA, TSLA, BP, DAL, BA)

Here is what you need to know.

Dow 20,000 is in the crosshairs. The Dow Jones Industrial Average booked a fractional gain on Tuesday, finishing at 19,945.04. The index is set to open higher by 0.1% near 19,971.

Bitcoin is up again. The cryptocurrency is up about 3% at $958, and trading at its best level since November 2013. Bitcoin has gained $135, or 16.4%, over the past week.

Toshiba crashes after warning of a multi-billion dollar writedown. Shares of the chips-to-construction group tumbled 20% on Wednesday after the company warned it might need to take a larger than expected writedown on its acquisition of Chicago Bridge & Iron.

Delta cancels an order from Boeing. Delta Air Lines has canceled an order for 18 Boeing widebody 787 Dreamliner jets, with a list price of $4 billion, that was inherited from its takeover of Northwest Airlines, the Seattle Times says.

BP is buying gas stations in Australia. The London-based oil giant has agreed to pay $1.3 billion for Woolworths’ 527 retail fuel outlets in Australia, according to Bloomberg.

Qualcomm got hit with an $854 million fine by South Korea. The Korea Fair Trade Commission, South Korea’s antitrust regulator, has ruled that Qualcomm hindered competition as a result of its business practices of patent licensing and smartphone modem chip sales, Reuters reports.

Panasonic is investing in a Tesla production facility. Panasonic will invest $256 million in a Tesla production facility that makes photovoltaic (PV) cells and modules, Reuters reports.

CEO pay is rising in the UK, but “economic profit” isn’t. A report released by the CFA Institute showed CEO pay in the UK has climbed 82% in the last 13 years, but the average company generated less than a 1% return for investors.

Stock markets around the world are up. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng (+0.8%) paced the gains overnight and Britain’s FTSE (+0.4%) leads in Europe.

US economic data trickles out. Pending home sales will be released at 10 a.m. ET. The US 10-year yield is unchanged at 2.56%.

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