YAHOO [BRIEFING.COM]: Selling
in the final minutes caused stocks to settle short of their session highs, but
the major equity averages still managed to hold on for another gain.
Stocks extended their early
morning slide in response to an abysmal Consumer Confidence Index for August.
The Index had been generally expected to ease to 52 from just above 59, but
slumped to 44.5, which is the worst reading since April 2009. It is suspected
that the worse-than-expected reading was the result of stock market volatility,
slow job growth, and concerns about the pace of the overall economic recovery.
Although there isn't any
empirical evidence that connects consumer confidence with actual spending,
participants used the report as an excuse to sell stocks. That sent the broad
equity market down to a loss of more than 1%, but it didn't take long for
buyers to scale back in. The stock market's move off of its morning low was
rather choppy, though.
Minutes from the most recent
FOMC meeting failed to have any meaningful impact on trade. They didn't offer
any clues for plans of further stimulus, although the members of the Committee
agreed monetary policy couldn't completely address the various strains on the
economy.
Despite a general lack of
leadership, stocks were still able to work their way up to a modest gain. The
effort was challenged shortly before the toll of the closing bell, but stocks
the major equity averages managed to hold on for varied gains -- the Nasdaq
again outperformed its counterparts with help from Internet-related plays.
This session's gain marked the
stock market's fifth advance in six sessions. During that time the S&P 500
has advanced 8%. It is still down 6% for August, though. As for the Nasdaq, it
is up 10% in six sessions, but down 6.5% for the month. Meanwhile, the Dow has
advanced almost 7% in the past six sessions, but is down 4.8% month to date.
Precious metals took their cue
from commentary out of a couple of Fed presidents today, including Chicago's
Charlie Evans who said that he favors strong accommodation at this point, and
would favor more accommodation if needed. Later in the session Minnesota Fed
President Narayana Kocherlakorta, one of 3 dissenters from the August 9
decision, said that if disinflationary pressures reappear, more accommodation
may be appropriate. These comments, coupled with the release of the FOMC
minutes, helped precious metals end higher on the day. Dec gold rallied for
2.1% to close at $1829.80 per ounce, while Sep silver gained 2% to finish at
$41.40 per ounce.
It was a quiet session for Oct
crude oil, which settled with gains of 1.9% at $88.90 per barrel. Similar to
trade in gold, crude oil futures rallied in early trade, but spent the
remainder of the day trading in a small range. They did manage to put in highs,
at $89.21, heading into to the close and ended just shy of those levels. Sept
natural gas ended up 2.1% to $3.91 per MMBtu.
Advancing Sectors: Telecom +1.0%, Industrials +0.8%,
Materials +0.8%, Health Care +0.4%, Consumer Discretionary +0.4%, Tech +0.3%,
Energy +0.3%, Consumer Staples +0.2%
Unchanged: Utilities
Declining Sectors: Financials -0.7%DJ30 +20.70 NASDAQ +14.00
NQ100 +0.6% R2K +0.5% SP400 +0.4% SP500 +2.84 NASDAQ Adv/Vol/Dec 1324/1.86
bln/1204 NYSE Adv/Vol/Dec 1910/1.02 bln/1084