YAHOO [BRIEFING.COM]: Friday brought stocks their fourth
straight loss, which left the S&P 500 3.8% lower for the week. Data
continues to drive the action.
Morning
participants took their initial trading cues from overseas participants, who
shrugged off stronger-than-expected eurozone GDP and sent Europe's major
bourses to losses of about 1%. Selling efforts against the DAX, FTSE, and CAC
eased in the afternoon, but the initial response indicated that while data of
past months may be solid there remains a strong concern about the future.
As such, the
response to domestic data was rather muted. Consumer prices for July increased
0.3%, which is a slightly stronger increase than the 0.2% rise that had been
widely expected. Excluding food and energy, consumer prices in July were up
just 0.1%, as expected.
Total business
inventories for June increased 0.3%, but that was mostly because inventories at
retailers increased 0.8%. Given weaker sales of recent months, that increase
means goods are accumulating rather than restocking shelves.
That said,
retail sales reportedly increased 0.4% in July, but that is below the 0.5%
increase that had been expected. Excluding autos, retail sales increased 0.2%,
as expected.
There is no
evidence that connects consumer confidence to spending, but the preliminary
Consumer Confidence Survey for August from the University of Michigan improved
modestly to 69.6, which is just below the 70.0 that had been widely expected.
Stocks spent
most of the session chopping along in listless, lackluster fashion before
trending lower into the close. The weak finish marked an appropriate conclusion
the poor trade of the past five days.
Retailers were
hit with some of the most selling. A disappointing outlook from JC Penney (JCP 19.82, -0.98) and an
underwhelming response to the latest from Nordstrom (JWN 31.05, -2.39) dragged the group
down to a 1.4% loss.
Utilities were
the only sector to advance. They finished with a 0.3% gain, but the
defensive-oriented sector's lack of market weight gives it little sway.
Meanwhile, tech
stocks, which collectively carry the most weight of any sector, were among the
weakest issues. They settled 0.7% lower as large-cap tech lagged. Weakness
among large-caps caused the Nasdaq to underperform its counterparts again.
Tangled trade
kept participants on the sidelines once again. In turn, trading volume on the
NYSE totaled a paltry 870 million shares. Only once this week did share volume
on the Big Board approach the 50-day average of 1.2 billion shares.
Treasuries had a
solid session that saw the yield on the benchmark 10-year Note close back below
2.70% and the yield on the 30-year Bond move down to 3.86% for the first time
in three weeks.
Oil prices set a weekly low close to $75 per barrel only
minutes before the close of pit trade. However, the commodity was able to trim
some of its loss and settle at $75.40 per barrel, down 0.4% for the day.
Natural gas
prices were whipsawed for most of the afternoon, but they managed to stage a
late rally that resulted in a 0.8% gain at $4.33 per MMBtu.
Precious metals
traded without much excitement. As such, gold prices settled with a fractional
loss at $1216 per ounce, while silver settled just 0.2% higher at $18.11 per
ounce.
At a broader
level, the CRB Commodity Index finished flat on Friday. However, it fell 2.2%
for the week. That was the worst weekly performance in more than one month.
The greenback
capped of an impressive week with a 0.4% gain against competing currencies. The
move gave it a weekly gain of 3.1%, its best weekly performance since May.
Advancing
Sectors: Utilities (+0.3%)
Declining Sectors: Consumer Discretionary (-1.1%), Tech
(-0.7%), Materials (-0.4%), Health Care (-0.4%), Energy (-0.3%), Financials
(-0.3%), Industrials (-0.2%), Telecom (-0.1%)
Unchanged: Consumer StaplesDJ30 -16.80 NASDAQ -16.79 NQ100
-0.7% R2K -1.2% SP400 -0.6% SP500 -4.36 NASDAQ Adv/Vol/Dec 774/1.62 bln/1798
NYSE Adv/Vol/Dec 1367/870 mln/1637