* China, Australia data ease economic concern
* Jobs, housing data on deck
* Futures up: Dow 75 pts, S&P 12.6 pts, Nasdaq 22.75 pts
* For up-to-the-minute market news see []
By Chuck Mikolajczak
NEW YORK, Sept 1 (Reuters) - U.S. stock index futures rose
on Wednesday as new signs of growth in China and Australia
eased concerns about the global economy's health and investors
awaited data on the labor market and housing.
China's manufacturing economy staged a moderate rebound in
August after slowing for several months, while Australia's
economy grew at its fastest pace in three years last quarter on
a boost in household spending. For details, see []
and []
"There was a rebound in the manufacturing index in China,
and in a market as oversold as this one, any good news is going
to have a more magnified effect on stocks," said Rick Meckler,
president of investment firm LibertyView Capital Management in
New York.
The manufacturing data in China helped boost metals prices,
and lifted copper to its highest level in more than four
months. Shares of aluminum producer Alcoa Inc <AA.N> gained 2.1
percent to $10.43 in premarket trade. []
An August report on private sector payrolls is due from
Automatic Data Processing at 8:15 a.m. EDT [].
Economists in a Reuters survey forecast 19,000 jobs were
created in August versus 42,000 created in July.
"There hasn't really been any good news associated with
jobs in quite a while. At this point, people are just looking
at trends. Can it get worse or is there at least stability at
these reasonably weak numbers," added Meckler.
S&P 500 futures <SPc1> rose 12.6 points and were above fair
value, a formula that evaluates pricing by taking into account
interest rates, dividends and time to expiration on the
contract. Dow Jones industrial average futures <DJc1> climbed
75 points, and Nasdaq 100 futures <NDc1> gained 22.75 points.
The Institute for Supply Management releases its August
manufacturing index at 10 a.m. EDT []. Economists look
for a reading of 53.0 versus 55.5 in July.
Also at 10 a.m. EDT [], the Commerce Department
releases July construction spending. Economists forecast a fall
of 0.5 percent, compared with an 0.1 percent rise in the prior
month.
Burger King Holdings Inc <BKC.N>, the No. 2 U.S. hamburger
chain, may put itself up for sale and has already held talks
with potential buyers, a source said. []
Its shares jumped nearly 20 percent to $19.70 premarket.
Apple Inc <AAPL.O> is expected to show off a snazzier line
of iPods on Wednesday and may also unveil plans to reinvigorate
its long-neglected TV line. Shares rose 1.1 percent to $245.86
premarket.
Genzyme Corp <GENZ.O> Chief Executive Henri Termeer told
Reuters he is willing to sell the company he built up over 25
years, but not for $69 a share. []
European shares advanced more than 1 percent to a near
two-week high on Wednesday, lifted by the China data and
corporate takeover talk in the market. []
Asian stocks rose as investors cheered the China and
Australian reports, which halted the yen's advance towards a
15-year peak against the dollar. The Nikkei index ended up 1.2
percent. []
(Reporting by Chuck Mikolajczak; editing by Jeffrey Benkoe)