YAHOO [BRIEFING.COM]:
The major averages finished the week on a lower note and the S&P 500 shed
0.2%. Elsewhere, the Dow Jones Industrial Average declined 0.2% and snapped its
streak of ten consecutive gains.
Equities slipped out of the gate with today's quadruple witching providing
additional volume at the start. The lower open was then followed by another
slip when the University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Survey was reported
below expectations. For March, the preliminary Survey fell to 71.8 from 77.6.
Meanwhile, the Briefing.com consensus expected the reading to remain at 77.6.
After receiving the final economic data point of the day, the S&P 500
reversed and headed back towards yesterday's close.
By midday, the index was able to climb within one point of its flat line.
However, the average could not muster additional strength, and instead began a
steady slide back towards its lows.
The S&P 500 did see its now-familiar final-hour wave of buying, but that
effort was merely able to bring the index back to the middle of today's range.
A handful of items made the session notable. The first noteworthy item was the
lack of defined sector leadership. During this year's market rally, most
sessions ended with either cyclical or defensively-oriented sectors clustered
in the lead. Today, utilities and financials ended atop sector rankings.
The defensively-oriented utilities sector saw a steady morning bid before
spending the afternoon near its best level of the day. The SPDR Utilities
Select Sector ETF (XLU 38.13, +0.25) ended higher by 0.7%.
Financials were in focus after the Federal Reserve released the second part of
its CCAR report. The results of the stress test showed that only Ally Financial
and BB&T (BBT 30.98, -0.75) failed to meet requirements. Meanwhile, Goldman Sachs (GS 154.84, +0.82) and JPMorgan Chase (JPM 50.02, -0.98) will need to
resubmit capital plans by the end of the third quarter. Shares of Goldman Sachs
ended with modest gains while JPMorgan Chase slid 1.9% after bank executives
testified before a Senate subcommittee regarding losses stemming from last
year's "London Whale" trade.
Another item of note was the mixed performance observed within the technology
sector. The SPDR Technology Select Sector ETF (XLK 30.20, -0.12) lost 0.4%
while its largest component, Apple (AAPL 443.66, +11.16), found buyers who helped the
stock rise 2.6%.
The relative strength of Apple prevented the tech sector from logging wider
losses. Major components traded lower as Google (GOOG 814.30, -7.24) and International
Business Machines (IBM 214.92, -0.88) saw respective losses of 0.9% and 0.4%. In
addition, chipmakers were broadly weaker and the PHLX Semiconductor fell 1.7%.
The selloff in microchip manufacturers may be perceived as a sign of exhaustion
after the 30-stock group had risen more than 13.0% since the start of the year.
Meanwhile, the entire tech sector has only gained 4.2% so far in 2013.
The final noteworthy item was the lack of a significant move in the CBOE
Volatility Index (VIX 11.42, +0.12). With stocks spending the day in negative
territory, the short-term volatility measure added just over 1.0%, suggesting
downside protection was not being sought out actively. Including today's
gain, VIX remains at levels last seen in early 2007.
In addition to the previously mentioned University of Michigan Survey, the
market received a heavy dose of economic data today.
A surge in energy costs led to the CPI increasing 0.7% in February after
reporting no growth in January. The Briefing.com consensus expected the CPI to
increase 0.5%. Gasoline prices increased 9.1% in February, which was the
largest monthly gain since increasing 20.5% in June 2009. Meanwhile, food
prices rose 0.1% after holding flat in January.
Excluding food and energy, core prices increased 0.2% in February, down from a
0.3% gain in January and exactly in-line with consensus expectations.
Industrial production increased 0.7% in February after reporting no growth in
January. The Briefing.com consensus expected an uptick of 0.4%. Capacity
utilization rates rose from an upwardly revised 79.2% (from 79.1%) in January
to 79.6% in February. The consensus expected utilization rates to increase to
79.4%.
The Empire Manufacturing Survey for March registered a reading of 9.2, which
was down from the prior month's reading of 10.0. Economists polled by
Briefing.com had expected that the survey would slip to 6.5.
January net long-term TIC flows report indicated a $25.7 billion inflow of
foreign capital into U.S. denominated assets. This follows the prior month's
$64.2 billion inflow.
On Monday, the March NAHB Housing Market Index will be reported at 10:00 ET.
Week in Review: S&P 500 Hovers Near Record Levels
On Monday, equities finished a very quiet session near their highs and the
S&P 500 gained 0.3%, bringing the index within 10 points of record closing
highs. The major averages began the day with slim losses. The cautious early
trade followed downbeat overseas action where investors responded to
disappointing industrial production news out of France and a series of
below-consensus data points from China. Dick's
Sporting Goods (DKS 47.00, -0.52) fell 10.9% after its earnings and revenue fell
short of the Capital IQ consensus. Additionally, guidance issued by the company
was also below analyst expectations.
The major averages finished Tuesday's session on a mixed note. The Dow
registered a slightly higher close while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq ended in
the red. The financial sector underperformed amid weakness in major bank names.
Morgan Stanley (MS 23.59, +0.79) lost 1.9% while the broader SPDR Financial
Select Sector ETF (XLF 18.44, +0.07) slipped 0.5%.
Wednesday ended with slim gains and the S&P 500 settled higher by 0.1%. The
industrial sector outperformed as transportation-related stocks saw broad
strength. The Dow Jones Transportation Average climbed 1.6% with 19 of 20
components registering gains. Airlines and truckers were among the index
leaders as Alaska Air (ALK 59.24, -0.31) and JB Hunt (JBHT 74.00, -0.51) settled with
respective gains of 4.3% and 5.6%.
On Thursday, the major averages ended with modest gains. The S&P 500
advanced 0.6%, and settled within three points of a record close. Meanwhile,
the Dow Jones Industrial Average registered its 10th consecutive gain. The
energy sector saw broad strength and the SPDR Energy
Select Sector ETF (XLE 79.60, -0.06) advanced 1.4% to end at its best level since
July 2011.DJ30 -25.03 NASDAQ -9.86 SP500 -2.53 NASDAQ Adv/Vol/Dec 1093/2.13
bln/1371 NYSE Adv/Vol/Dec 1408/1.83 bln/1611
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