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Stocks extended their gains Monday, with the Dow and S&P on track to break a three-day losing streak, ahead of a crucial vote on austerity measures in Greece and after banking regulators announced capital rules that were less burdensome than expected.

The
Dow Jones Industrial Average gained, led by
BofA [BAC Loading... ()
] , AmEx [AXP Loading... ()
] and
Microsoft [MSFT Loading... ()
] , after
ending lower last week amid continuing jitters over the euro zone debt crisis. The Dow is heading for its biggest daily gain in over two months. The
S&P 500 and the tech-heavy
Nasdaq were higher.
The CBOE Volatility Index, widely considered the best gauge of fear in the market, slipped below 21.
Techs, consumer discretionary and
banks were the biggest gainers among the S&P sectors. "The entire summer can be dictated by the next two weeks—Greece and jobs," said Todd Schoenberger, managing director of LandColt Trading. “Greece is still the top on traders’ minds—the debate begins in Greece tonight and there are also organized protests,” noted Schoenberger. “There is nervousness and uneasy feeling, and you’re going to see volatility for the rest of the week up until Friday.”The Greek parliament was debating a fresh austerity package but the government is fragile and
analysts fear that it may not pass. The euro
slipped against the dollar ahead of the vote. Meanwhile, French President Nicholas Sarkozy offered a solution for banks to
roll over holdings of Greek debt for 30 years as the Greek government fought to support the austerity plan to avoid a default. "We're still a couple years away from Greek default," Marc Chandler, currency strategist at Brown Brothers Harriman told CNBC. "I know many people think it's imminent, but the European officials will do everything they can to prolong [a default]...so that banks in Europe will be stronger and better prepared to deal with it." Financials gained after regulators proposed
higher tier one capital ratios for big and systemically important banks over the weekend in effort to stabilize the system.Meanwhile, Rochdale Securities vice president for equity research Dick Bove said
BofA stock is "massively undervalued."Rivals
Citigroup [C Loading... ()
] ,
Goldman Sachs [GS Loading... ()
] and
Morgan Stanley [MS Loading... ()
] were also trading higher. But despite the day's rally, the sector is still the worst performer in 2011. The Bank for International Settlements said
interest rates must rise in order to fight global inflation and that delays in cutting budget deficits may make the sovereign crisis even worse.
Oil prices were mixed with
U.S. light, sweet crude slipping 55 cents to settle at $90.61 a barrel, while
London Brent crude gained 87 cents to settle at $105.99. Among techs,
Microsoft [MSFT Loading... ()

] rose ahead of an anticipated release of a version of the software giant's Office that is accessible via the Internet. Microsoft is the best performer on the Dow for June, the first time the stock has outperformed the blue-chip index on a monthly basis.
Cisco [CSCO Loading... ()
] gained even after the tech bellwether was cut to "neutral" from "outperform" by Cowen. Cisco is the worst performer on the Dow this year. Meanwhile, the Supreme Court said the
government cannot ban the sale of violent video games to minors as it would violate free-speech rights. Shares of
Take-Two Interactive [TTWO Loading... ()
] and
Activision Blizzard [ATVI Loading... ()

] gained following the rule.
LDK Solar [LDK Loading... ()
] jumped after the Chinese solar company said it plans to buy back up to $100 million of its undervalued American Depository shares (ADSs).
Disney [DIS Loading... ()
] gained even after Nomura cut its price target on the media conglomerate to $45 from $47.
GSV Capital [GSVC Loading... ()

] jumped after the investment fund said it has taken a
small stake in Facebook that values the social networking site at about $70 billion.In M&A news,
Continucare [CNU Loading... ()
] skyrocketed more than 30 percent after
Metropolitan Health Networks [MDF Loading... ()
] offered by acquire the health care firm for about $416 million. And
LeapFrog [LF Loading... ()

] gained after the CEO of the educational toy maker said the firm is open to the idea of being acquired.And in earnings,
Nike [NKE Loading... ()

] is
slated to report after-the-bell. (
Read More: Nike Most Important Stock Today)
Treasury prices extended losses after the government auctioned $35 billion in 2-year notes, which had a a high yield of 0.395 percent and a bid-to-cover of 3.08. Auctions of 5-year notes and 7-year notes are expected Tuesday and Wednesday, respectively. President Obama is due to meet Senate leaders
to discuss about raising the U.S. debt ceiling, with an Aug. 2 deadline approaching. On the economic front, consumer spending was
largely unchanged in May for the first time in almost a year, according to the Commerce Department, while a reading on Midwest manufacturing rose slightly in May from the prior month.
European shares ended higher, after falling for eight straight weeks, amid hopes of a solution to Greece's debt problem.
On Tap This Week:MONDAY: Earnings from Nike
TUESDAY: S&P Case-Shiller home price index, consumer confidence, 5-yr note auction, IMF board to select new chief
WEDNESDAY: Weekly mortgage apps, pending home sales index, oil inventories, 7-yr note auction, farm prices, Dell analyst meeting, Fed meeting on card fees; Earnings from Family Dollar, General Mills, KB Home, Monsanto
THURSDAY: Weekly jobless claims, Fed's Bullard speaks, Chicago PMI, End of QE2, Marathon Oil split takes place
FRIDAY: Consumer sentiment, ISM mfg index, construction spending, Biden's deadline for deficit plan, HP launches TouchPad, auto sales
More on CNBC.com![]()
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