TOP STORIES 
 
OPEC MEMBERS NEARING COMPROMISE ON SUPPLY CUTS 

OPEC members are inching toward a compromise that could lead them to cut oil supply, as the producer group prepares for one of its most closely watched meetings in years this week.

 
U.S. GDP REVISED UP TO 3.9% ADVANCE 
 

The economy expanded at its fastest pace in more than a decade during the spring and summer, showing the U.S. sits on a solid foundation despite increasing global uncertainty.

 
U.S. STOCKS PAUSE AS CRUDE PRICES SLIDE 
 

U.S. stocks found little direction and traded flat as a resumed slide in crude-oil prices dragged down energy stocks. Energy stocks in the S&P 500 were recently down 1.4%, as crude-oil futures fell 2%.

 
AMERICANS BORROWING MORE BRISKLY FOR CARS, HOMES 
 

U.S. household debt--including mortgages, credit cards, auto loans and student loans--rose $78 billion between July and September to $11.7 trillion, according to new figures from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.

 
FERGUSON ERUPTS IN VIOLENCE AFTER OFFICER NOT INDICTED 
 

A grand jury declined to indict a white police officer in the shooting of an unarmed black teenager in the St. Louis suburb of Ferguson, leading to violent confrontations between police officers and protesters.

 
SPOTIFY'S REVENUE ROSE IN 2013, BUT LOSSES CONTINUED 
 

Music-streaming company Spotify said revenue grew substantially last year, but said it continued to post large losses as investment weighed on profit. The privately held company said its net loss was $71.7 million for 2013.

 
U.S. BANKS SHOWED CONTINUED STRENGTH IN 3Q 
 

The U.S. banking industry showed continued strength in the third quarter with broad-based revenue growth and a year-over-year jump in profits, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. said.

 
SANTANDER FINANCE CHIEF NAMED NEW CEO 
 

Santander replaced its chief executive with its long-standing finance chief and made several changes to its board of directors, in the first major shake-up at the eurozone's largest lender since Ana Botín took the reins following her father's death.

 
U.S. CONSUMER CONFIDENCE UNEXPECTEDLY FALLS 
 

U.S. consumers toned down their upbeat view of the economy this month. The Conference Board said its index of consumer confidence dropped to 88.7 in November from a revised 94.1 in October. Economists had forecast the latest index to rise to 96.5.

 
TMX GROUP PROPOSES NEW FEES FOR CLEARING-UNIT SERVICES 
 

Canada's main stock-market operator is looking to charge new fees for some services provided by its equity and fixed-income clearing unit, raising concerns over TMX Group's pricing power over listed companies and other market participants.

 
OECD SEES EUROZONE IN 'STAGNATION TRAP' 
 

The eurozone economy may have fallen into "a persistent stagnation trap" and that could partly be due to the European Central Bank's reluctance to undertake quantitative easing, according to OECD economists.

 
 
 
 
  ======= DOW JONES NEWSWIRES ANALYSIS AND COMMENTARIES ======= 
 
 
Big Picture 
WHY 4% GROWTH DOESN'T FEEL THAT ROBUST 
 

The Commerce Department revised up the annual growth rate for 3Q real gross-domestic product to 3.9%, putting growth for six months at a rapid 4.25%. So, why doesn't the U.S. economy feel like it's surging by 4%-plus, writes Kathleen Madigan.

 
MoneyBeat 
APPLE'S MARKET CAP TOPS $700 BILLION 
 

Apple just cleared another major milestone as its market valuation topped $700 billion for the first time, making it the world's largest company. The next larges is Exxon Mobil with a market cap of $405 billion.