TOP STORIES 
 
U.S. STOCKS SURGE ON FED REASSURANCE 

The Dow Industrials vaulted to their biggest two-day gain in more than three years, bolstered for a second session by reassurances from the Federal Reserve that it remains in no rush to raise interest rates. The DJIA soared 421 points, or 2.4%, to finish at 17778.

 
NIKE SALES JUMP 15% 
 

Nike said its sales rose 15% to $7.38 billion for the quarter ended November, exceeding analysts' expectations. Nike reported a profit of $655 million, or 74 cents a share. Shares fell 2% in after-hours trading.

 
METLIFE DESIGNATED 'SYSTEMICALLY IMPORTANT' 
 

A panel of federal regulators concluded MetLife poses significant risks to the financial system and warrants tougher oversight, setting up a possible legal showdown with the U.S. about whether that assessment is accurate.

 
AMERICAN REALTY SUIT BLAMES EX-CHAIRMAN 
 

Shares of American Realty Capital Properties fell 4.8% after a former executive alleged in a lawsuit that its former chairman had directed employees to manipulate financial results.

 
GOLDMAN'S WALDRON BECOMES INVESTMENT BANKING CO-HEAD 
 

Goldman Sachs Group promoted John Waldron to co-head of investment-banking, replacing John S. Weinberg, a vice chairman whose father and grandfather once led the Wall Street firm.

 
U.S. WEIGHS RESPONSE TO SONY HACK 
 

Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson said the U.S. is weighing a "range of options" to respond to the hack of Sony Pictures, but declined to say who the government believes is behind what it regards as "a very serious attack".

 
FED GIVES BANKS MORE TIME TO SELL PRIVATE-EQUITY, HEDGE FUND STAKES 
 

The Federal Reserve said it would give banks two more years to sell private equity and hedge fund stakes covered by the Volcker rule, a win for banks who had requested more time to unwind positions.

 
PUTIN STRIKES HARSH TONE WITH WEST 
 

President Vladimir Putin accused the West of trying to subdue and disarm Russia at a defiant annual news conference, and blamed "external factors" for the collapse of Russia's currency and stock market.

 
OIL PRICES RESUME SLIDE 
 

Oil prices resumed their monthslong slide amid bearish comments from Russia and OPEC leaders. January Nymex crude ended down $2.36, or 4.2%, at $54.11 a barrel. The global Brent crude contract ended down $1.91, or 3.1%, at $59.27 a barrel.

 
TOP U.S. REGULATORS SEEK INPUT ON ASSET MANAGEMENT 
 

Top U.S. regulators said they would ask for public input on the risks associated with the asset management industry, offering the most detail yet on their continuing probe of whether the $60-trillion-plus industry deserves stricter regulation.

 
U.S. JOBLESS CLAIMS FALL TO 289,000 
 

The number of Americans filing for first-time unemployment benefits dropped last week and stayed near 14-year lows. Initial jobless claims fell by 6,000 to a seasonally adjusted 289,000. Economists expected 295,000 new claims.

 
 
 
 
  ======= DOW JONES NEWSWIRES ANALYSIS AND COMMENTARIES ======= 
 
 
Big Picture 
FOR FED, 'PATIENT' IS A VIRTUE 
 

Some economists think adding "patient" to the recurring phrase "considerable time" muddies rather than clarifies the Federal Reserve's expected policy path. The Fed, however, may be on to something, writes Kathleen Madigan.

 
MoneyBeat 
YELLEN HAS SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE 
 

If the hallmark of a great central banker is the ability to please everyone, then Janet Yellen is on her game. Both stock and dollar bulls saw something to like in the Federal Reserve statement released after a two-day policy meeting.