JNJ), M&T Bank (NYSE:

MTB), Say Street (NYSE: STT) all reporting before the open. After the close, all eyes will be on Intel and Washington Mutual, as they report earnings.

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What works for two airlines should work for two others. At least that’s the thought process behind a possible merger of United (NASDAQ:UAUA) and Continental (NYSE:CAL). They believe that if there are financial and marketing advantages to the Delta (NYSE:DAL) merger with Northwest (NYSE:NWA) that they should go next.

According to Reuters the two carriers “have laid most of the groundwork for a merger, two people briefed on the matter said, and could have a deal ready “pretty quickly” if Delta Air Lines and Northwest Airlines announce a tie-up.” Now that the Delta/Northwest deal is done, they’re prone to speed up that process.

While the value of airline mergers is dubious, two big mergers could cause regulators to turn down both. The marriages are based on the idea that airlines can cut costs in personnel, marketing, and route consolidation. If the is true, it means lay-offs and service to fewer cities. It also could help an airline to raise ticket prices as it becomes the sole providers to air travel out of some cities.

Two large airline mergers have to make the US government looks at whether it is good to have only three large airlines in the US, including AMR (NYSE:AMR) instead of five.

Douglas A. McIntyre is an editor at 247wallst.com.

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Archive for April 15th, 2008

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Nissan and Chrysler will start to build full-sized pick-ups together. According to The Wall Street Journal, “Chrysler will start building a huge pickup for Nissan at its truck plant in Saltillo, Mexico.” Nissan will also build some small automobiles for the US company.

The deal allows both companies to increase output from some of their plants, making more efficient use of manufacturing facilities and the arrangement could also cut design costs for the two automakers.

The new partnership raises the question of whether embattled Ford (NYSE:F) should do the same thing. Ford’s shares trade between $6 and $7 most days, about where they were when there were rumors of Chapter 11 two years ago. Ford now has only about 15% of the US market, and, if that share falls more, it has to raise the question of how viable it is for Ford to “go it alone” in the US market.

Ford could turn to several partners, but the most obvious one is Volkswagen. VW has said that it wants to expand into the US market and has had little success here. Since Ford losses money on many of its smaller cars, an area where VW is strong, it may make sense for Ford to take VW-produced cars for its domestic dealers and have a piece of a profitable joint venture instead of losing billions on its own.

At the end of the day, Ford has to do something.

Douglas A. McIntyre is an editor at 247wallst.com.

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U.S. stock futures were down slightly this morning, reflecting nervousness about economic data and earnings reports due out this day.

Stocks fell Tuesday for the second session in a row after disappointing earnings from Wachovia surprised the market. The Dow industrials ended the day down 23 points, the S&P 500 lost 5 points, and the Nasdaq Composite fell by 14 points.

In the news, Delta Air Lines (NYSE: DAL) and Northwest Airlines (NYSE: NWA) announced yesterday that they will combine to form the world’s largest airline, with a market value of $17.7 billion. The new airline will be called Delta. United and Continental may be next in line to tie the knot.

In another blow to the ailing airline sector, oil prices rose to an intraday record of more than $112 a barrel Tuesday as the U.S. dollar continued to weaken against other major currencies.

There was evidence of continuing deterioration in the housing market — according to a report by RealtyTrac for March, U.S. foreclosure filings rose 57% and bank repossessions more than doubled from last year. However, there was some good news from Detroit as Ford announces plans to step up production of the compact Focus by 30% to meet strong demand.

Economic data due out this day includes the Producer Price Index, a measure of wholesale inflation, at 8:30 a.m. EST, the Empire State Manufacturing Survey at 8:30 a.m. EST, and the Housing Market Index at 1:00 p.m. EST.

It is a big day for earnings, with BHP Billiton (NYSE: BHP), Johnson & Johnson (NYSE:

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