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Stocks move forward at open

Investors cautious ahead of Federal Reserve decision on interest rates.

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NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Stocks gained ground at the start of trading Tuesday as investors awaited the Federal Reserve's decision on interest rates.

The Dow Jones industrial average was just above breakeven. The Nasdaq composite index added 0.2 percent. The Standard & Poor's 500 index was 0.1 percent higher.

Among stocks in the news Tuesday: H&R Block (Charts, Fortune 500), Kroger (Charts, Fortune 500), AT&T (Charts, Fortune 500), Cadbury Schweppes (Charts), Sony (Charts) and Wendy's International (Charts).

Markets are expecting the central bank to lower rates by a quarter of a percentage point. Traders, however, haven't ruled out a bigger, half of a percentage point cut. And investors and economists will be closely reading the statement that will accompany the Fed's decision for clues as to what the central bank will do with rates in the coming months.

The prospect of the Fed lowering rates has helped overshadow the deepening mortgage fallout. Hopes for rate cuts lifted U.S. stocks Monday, and it helped markets in Asia close higher Tuesday. But major indexes in Europe had turned lower in midday trading after opening higher.

If the Fed cuts rates, it will likely cite continued problems in the nation's mortgage and credit markets. Further problems from subprime mortgages were apparent late Monday when Washington Mutual, the nation's largest thrift, said it would post a loss in the current quarter, slash its dividend and lay off more than 3,000 workers. Shares of WaMu fell more than 8 percent in pre-market trading Tuesday.

Meanwhile, mortgage finance firm Fannie Mae announced it would follow rival Freddie Mac and change the way it repurchases the mortgages that it has guaranteed that are significantly late in its payments or in foreclosure. The moves are seen as a way for the struggling firms to preserve capital by avoiding additional large losses in the near term, although it is not likely to reduce their eventual liability. Both firms are in the process of selling additional shares of stock to raise cash needed to cover large losses.

In other corporate news, chipmaker Texas Instruments said late Monday it now expects sales and profits toward the higher end of its previously announced guidance range in the current period. Shares of Texas Instruments gained nearly 5 percent in after-hours trading Monday.

Aircraft maker Boeing, a Dow component, is due to give an update on the progress of its 787 Dreamliner, which has been hit by delays and missed deadlines. Shares could be hurt if it announces it will be unable meet its goal of producing 109 of its next-generation passenger jet by the end of 2009. Shares of Boeing were little changed in Frankfurt trading early Tuesday ahead of the 10 a.m. ET update.

NYSE Euronext, the holding company for the New York Stock Exchange, opened a Beijing office Tuesday in a bid to attract more listings from Chinese companies for the New York exchange.

Oil prices crept back above the $88 a barrel mark in early trading, gaining 33 cents to $88.19 for a barrel of light sweet crude. To top of page

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