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             Minutes of the Federal Reserve's most recent meeting of its 
			policy-setting committee will be published on Wednesday, the second 
			trading day of a holiday-shortened week in the United States. The 
			U.S. stock market will be closed on Monday for Presidents Day. 
 			Investor interest in the January 28-29 meeting's minutes will 
			probably focus on discussions surrounding the Fed's forward 
			guidance. The U.S. central bank's threshold that the U.S. 
			unemployment rate must hit 6.5 percent before Fed policymakers will 
			consider an increase in interest rates seems stale now. The
 			jobless rate is just a notch higher at 6.6 percent.
 			The Fed doesn't expect to start raising rates until at least late 
			next year. So Wall Street will focus intently on the Fed's 
			maneuvering over how to adjust this guidance, which is supportive of 
			higher equity prices. 						
 
 			"We want to see any discussion on the language moving away from the 
			thresholds," said Quincy Krosby, market strategist at Prudential 
			Financial in Newark, New Jersey. "It's clear the thresholds are 
			boxing them in."
 			"The market wants to hear they are flexible regarding data that 
			perhaps continues to soften," she said. "Any sense of what it would 
			take for them to pause the tapering will be important."
 			Fed Chair Janet Yellen said in her first congressional testimony 
			earlier this week that "unseasonably cold temperatures ... may be 
			affecting economic activity in the job market and elsewhere," giving 
			traders a reason to dismiss a recent soft patch of economic data.
 			The Fed announced in December that it would begin to shrink the 
			amount it spends monthly on asset purchases in its stimulus program 
			to support the economy. The beginning of the end of the stimulus 
			shifted market focus to fundamentals and economic data.
 			Traditionally market-moving numbers next week include U.S. housing 
			starts on Wednesday and existing home sales on Friday, as well as 
			producer and consumer price inflation on Wednesday and Thursday, 
			respectively.
 			However if the recent pattern continues, any weakness in the numbers 
			will be disregarded, blamed on excessive cold weather, and the 
			market will move on.
 			"The market is getting used to the bad weather, factoring it in," 
			said John Canally, investment strategist and economist for LPL 
			Financial in Boston. "But the story is, it might get to April, when 
			we get the March data, that we have a return to what the underlying 
			strength of the economy looks like, and then that might be 
			overstated."
 			PULL OUT YOUR CHARTS
 			In the coming week, technical analysis could fill the vacuum left by 
			the uncertainty about how economic numbers reflect the underlying 
			strength of the U.S. economy.
 			The S&P 500 traded on Tuesday above its 50-day moving average for 
			the first time since January 24. That level, now near 1,811, served 
			as support on a first test shortly after the open on Thursday. 
            
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			That curve is again trending higher. Next week, the S&P 500's 
			trading range could tighten as it approaches the 1,850 area, near 
			the intraday and closing record highs set in mid-January. "The 1,850 area is very important. It's safe to say there will be 
			a good amount of sell interest up there," said Frank Cappelleri, 
			equity sales trader and market technician at Instinet in New York.
 			He added, however, that "you could make the argument that there were 
			a lot of people ready to sell near the 50-day moving average a few 
			days ago, and the market just blew past it."
 			The market's momentum is on the upside, coming off the best two-week 
			performance of the year. Unless stocks trade relatively flat for the 
			week, support or resistance will have to give.
 			For the week, the Dow Jones industrial average <.DJI> and S&P 500 
			<.SPX> each rose 2.3 percent, and the Nasdaq Composite <.IXIC> 
			climbed 2.9 percent. By Friday's close, the three major U.S. stock 
			indexes had scored their biggest weekly percentage gains of 2014 — and their first back-to-back weekly gains this year.
 			"Positive momentum came back into the picture, and people who missed 
			the upturn put some money to work," Cappelleri said. "Indicators 
			that were depressed have turned around, neutralized and are now back 
			to overbought."
 			In the search for more catalysts to influence the stock market's 
			direction next week, traders will have a few earnings to latch on 
			to, with Coca-Cola Co <KO.N> and Wal-Mart Stores, Inc <WMT.N> as the 
			headliners.
 			Coca-Cola, the world's largest soft drink company, will report 
			fourth-quarter earnings on Tuesday before the U.S. stock market 
			opens.
 			Wal-Mart is expected to post fourth-quarter results on Thursday, and 
			more importantly, the world's largest retailer will give its 2014 
			earnings forecast. 			
			 
 			With 398 S&P 500 companies having reported results so far, 66.3 
			percent have beaten earnings expectations, above the historical 
			average of 63 percent. More than 64 percent have topped revenue 
			forecasts, above the long-term average of 61 percent, both according 
			to Thomson Reuters data.
 			(Reporting by Rodrigo Campos; additional 
			reporting by Jonathan Spicer; editing by Jan Paschal) 
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