By Anora Mahmudova, MarketWatch

NEW YORK (MarketWatch) -- U.S. stocks retreated from record levels reached during the previous session to open lower Thursday after weekly jobless claims rose to their highest level since late March.

Investors are focused on a trio of data due at 10 a.m. Eastern Time: existing-home sales for November, the Philadelphia Fed's December manufacturing index (which last month dipped to the lowest reading since May) and leading indicators for November.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJI)opened 16 points or 0.1% lower at 16,150.57. S&P 500 index (SPX) began the session 4 points or 0.2% lower 1,807.32. Nasdaq Composite opened 10 points or 0.2% lower at 4,060.19.

Both Dow and S&P 500 closed at all-time highs on Wednesday as investors took the view that a Fed tapering meant confidence in the economy and welcomed the central bank's commitment to low rates until the unemployment rate declines well below 6.5%, especially if projected inflation remains below the 2% target.

"This positive forward guidance on short-term interest rates appears to have offset any near-term concerns about tapering," Gary Thayer, chief macro strategist at Wells Fargo Advisors, wrote in a note.

"This was probably an intentional decision by policymakers to smooth out the market impact of tapering," he added.

U.S. states last week processed the most applications for unemployment benefits since late March, but the spike probably reflects typical holiday-season ups and downs instead of any abrupt change in a labor market that's shown clear improvement lately.

In corporate news:

* Facebook fell 1.6% after the social network company said it plans a public offering of 70 million Class A shares, with 27 million from Facebook itself and the rest from major shareholders, with co-founder Mark Zuckerberg putting up the majority.

* Oracle rose 4.5% after the tech company's quarterly results beat Wall Street forecasts late Wednesday.

* Darden Restaurants Inc. was down 2.3% premarket after the restaurant chain company missed analysts expectations. The firm also said it expects to spin off its struggling Red Lobster chain, after facing pressure from shareholders.

* ConAgra Foods Inc. jumped nearly 4.8% in premarket after reaffirming its full-year guidance and posting a fiscal second-quarter profit and sales gain.

* Rite Aid Corp. shares fell nearly 7.7% after the company cut its per-share estimate for the fiscal year, but trimmed losses to trade down 2%. It said fiscal third-quarter earnings rose 16%.

* Shares of Target Corp. fell 1.2% in premarket after the company was hit by an extensive credit-card breach over the Black Friday shopping weekend.

* Accenture shares climbed 4.3% after the management consulting firm said it earned $1.15 per share in the fiscal first quarter, up from $1.06 in the same quarter a year ago. That earnings growth came from higher revenue and growth in new bookings.

In other markets:

* Losses for gold deepened in European trading hours, with the metal briefly breaching the key psychological level of $1,200 an ounce for the first time since the summer. The metal was last down 2.5%, with silver taking an even harder knock. Gold losses came as the dollar hit a five-year high against the yen.

* European markets sailed higher, while Japan stocks soared to seven-month highs.

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