By Anora Mahmudova and Carla Mozee, MarketWatch

Weekly jobless claims drop to lowest level in 7 weeks

NEW YORK (MarketWatch) -- U.S. stock futures pointed to a slightly higher open on Wall Street Wednesday, building on five straight days of advances that sent both the S&P 500 and Dow industrials to record levels.

Futures for the S&P 500 (SPH5) were up 1.8 points at 2,080.70, and those for the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJH5) gained 15 points, or 0.1%, at 17,991. Nasdaq 100 futures (NDH5) rose 5 points, or 0.1%, to 4,283.

Investors will wrap up the trading day early, with both the New York Stock Exchange and the Nasdaq Stock Market closing at 1 p.m. Eastern Time. The markets will remain closed Thursday for Christmas Day, and will reopen Friday with normal hours.

Market reaction to better-than-expected weekly jobless claims was minimal. The number of people who applied for U.S. unemployment-insurance benefits fell by 9,000 to 280,000 in the week that ended Dec. 20, a seven-week low and only modestly above a 14-year low, according to Labor Department data released Wednesday.

Recent employment data has indicated strengthening in the labor market, which, in turn, should support the consumer-driven U.S. economy. Third-quarter U.S. gross domestic product growth was revised up to a 5% annualized rate, powered by consumer spending, the Commerce Department said Tuesday.

Following the GDP reading -- the highest pace of growth in 11 years -- U.S. stocks finished higher. The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJI) closed above 18,000 for the first time, in the fifth-fastest 1,000-point rise in the Dow's history.

The Dow at 18,000 before the end of 2014 is "extremely encouraging", considering the "January Effect" which is the theory that "markets will rally even more when we get in to 2015, as investors pile back in to the equity market," said Neal Gilbert, senior market analyst, at Forex.com, in a Tuesday note.

The Dow reaching 20,000 by February may be a stretch, but not entirely out of reach, said Gilbert.

"As bold as I'd like to get, the daily trend-line resistance indicates that 20,000 won't be achieved until late [third quarter of 2015], so we may have a little time to wait before we start breaking out our Jules Verne-themed balloons," he wrote.

Oil: At 10:30 a.m. Eastern Time, the Energy Information Administration is expected to report a drawdown of 2.4 million barrels from U.S. crude-oil inventories for the week ended Dec. 19, according to a Platts survey. If the EIA reports a decline in oil stocks, that would be in contrast to late Tuesday data from the American Petroleum Institute, which showed crude inventories rose 5.4 million barrels last week.

Oil prices, which have been volatile in recent weeks on oversupply concerns, moved lower on Wednesday. West Texas Intermediate crude futures for February delivery (CLG5) fell nearly 2%, to $56 a barrel. Brent crude futures also dropped more than 2%, to $60.29 a barrel.

Stocks to watch: Surgical-implants maker Stryker Corp. (SYK) is preparing a bid for U.K.'s medical-devices maker Smith & Nephew PLC , according to a Bloomberg report.

Shares of Cal-Maine Foods Inc. (CALM) could see active trading after the company reported disappointing results for its fiscal second quarter on Tuesday.

Other markets: In Asia, Japan's Nikkei Average rose 1.2%, while Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index ended up a more modest 0.1%. European stock markets were mixed ahead of the Christmas break. Gold futures (GCG5) were down slightly, less than $1 an ounce.

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