YAHOO [BRIEFING.COM]: Equities
began the session on a higher note as quadruple witching contributed to a
volume surge at the start. However, after reaching session highs within the
first few minutes of trade, the major averages spent the rest of the day
drifting towards the unchanged line. As a result the S&P 500 finished flat.
Telecom stocks outperformed as the sector traded higher by 0.6%. MetroPCS (PCS 11.62, +0.43) added 3.8% after the
company announced it will carry ZTE's Anthem 4G smartphone—the first ZTE 4G
device available in the U.S. Other telecom names were also on the rise as Sprint (S 5.65, +0.21) jumped 3.9% while AT&T (T 38.10, +0.16), 0.21) and Verizon (VZ 45.69, +0.20) both gained 0.4%.
Meanwhile, Inteliquent (IQNT 9.38, -1.02) slid 9.8% after the company's President
and Chief Operating Officer, Surendra Saboo announced he will resign from the
company, effective October 1, 2012. In addition, IQNT's Chief Financial
Officer, Robert Junkroski will also step down on October 1, 2012. Following the
pair of resignations, Raymond James downgraded shares of Inteliquent from
‘market perform' to ‘underperform.'
The healthcare sector was also one of the top performers. Within the group, Dehaier Medical (DHRM 2.45, +0.91) soared 59.1% after
winning a three-year procurement agreement from a major Ukrainian medical
equipment manufacturer. Elsewhere, Halozyme Therapeutics (HALO 7.95, +1.54) surged 24.0% after
announcing with partner ViroPharma (VPHM 30.31, +2.13) that the Federal Drug
Administration has enabled ViroPharma to resume clinical studies of Cinryze in
combination with rHuPH20. Shares of VPHM gained 8.3% after the announcement.
On the downside, VIVUS (VVUS 21.00, -2.72) slumped 11.5% after the company announced it
expects to receive an opinion recommending against the approval for weight loss
drug Qsiva (trade name Qsymia in the U.S.) from the Committee for Medicinal
Products for Human Use in Europe.
The Dow Jones Transportation Average shed 1.0% as it continued its recent
underperformance. Expeditors International (EXPD 36.78, -0.75), UPS (UPS 71.88, -0.73), and Norfolk Southern (NSC 65.00, -1.11) all slid between 1.0%
and 2.0%. Only Overseas Shipholding Group (OSG 7.31, +0.15) managed to stay
positive within the group of twenty transportation stocks.
Shares of Indian companies rallied after India's Sensex index advanced 2.2% to
close at its highest level in 14 months. The general strength resulted from the
announcement of economic reforms in the country. As a result, The India Fund (IFN 22.50, +0.33) rose 1.5%.
U.S. listings of Indian companies made broad advances as financials ICICI Bank (IBN 39.74, +2.09) and HDFC Bank (HDB 36.78, +0.77) added 5.6% and 2.1%,
respectively. Elsewhere, copper producer Sterlite Industries (SLT 7.74, +0.40) jumped 5.5% and car
maker Tata Motors (TTM 25.35, +0.70) ended firmer by 2.8%.
Shares of tire makers were under pressure after KeyBanc downgraded Goodyear (GT 12.73, -0.65) and Cooper Tire (CTB 19.94, -2.05) from ‘buy' to ‘hold.'
The downgrade resulted from uncertainty over expiring Chinese tariffs, as well
as declining tire prices. Goodyear slipped 4.9% while Cooper Tire slid 9.3% in
the wake of the rating cut.
Week in Review: Equities Quiet Following QE3
On Monday, stocks began the session on a negative note after the September
Empire Manufacturing Survey registered its worst reading since April 2009. The
bearish sentiment was then extended as unfounded rumors of tapping into the
strategic petroleum reserve sent the major averages to fresh session lows. As a
result, the S&P 500 ended lower by 0.3%. IRIS (IRIS 19.47, +0.01) surged 45.6% after
announcing that the company will be acquired by Danaher (DHR 54.90, -0.12) for $19.50 per share.
Tuesday's session was mostly uneventful as equities remained near their opening
levels throughout the day. The major averages showed some divergence as the
S&P 500 shed 0.2% while the Dow added 0.1%. Defensive stocks outperformed
as the consumer staples sector was the top performer of the day. FedEx (FDX 84.39, -0.78) beat on earnings and
revenues while lowering its second quarter and full-year guidance.
On Wednesday, equities began on a slightly higher note after the Bank of Japan
raised its asset purchase target in an attempt to inject additional liquidity
into the market and to weaken the yen. Stocks were also boosted slightly by
data which indicated an uptick in existing home sales as well as building
permits. However, late day selling pushed the major averages off session highs
as the S&P 500 settled higher by 0.1%. AutoZone (AZO 371.80, +0.17) added 3.4% after
delivering a mixed quarterly report.
Crude oil trended lower but
stayed in positive territory after touching its pit session high of $93.75 per
barrel. It brushed a session low of $92.61 per barrel moments before settling
the week 6.5% lower at $92.90 per barrel. Crude was unable to bounce back from
losses from previous sessions that came on weaker-than-anticipated inventory
data that showed a large build of 8.534 mln barrels when a build of 1.4 mln
barrels was expected and Monday's unexplained slide of over 4 points.
Natural gas came off its floor session low of $2.96 per MMBtu and trended
higher as the session went on. Despite settling at its session high, it
finished the week flat at $3.08 per MMBtu.
Gold traded at new six and a half month highs during today's floor trade as the
dollar chopped around in negative territory. The yellow metal climbed as high
as $1790.00 per ounce in morning action but lost momentum moments later.
Despite dropping to a session low of $1771.70 per ounce, gold managed to settle
higher at $1778.10 per ounce and book a 0.3% weekly gain.
Silver rallied to a session high of $35.26 per ounce shortly after pit trade
opened but slid to a session low of $34.37 per ounce. It attempted to recover
the earlier gains but fell short as it settled slightly lower at $34.65 per
ounce. Despite the loss, silver finished the week one cent above last Friday's
closing price.
Thursday's session got off to a slow start after bearish data from around the
world overshadowed investor optimism. Japan reported a wider-than-expected
trade deficit while the French and Eurozone PMI readings were well short of
expectations. Domestically, the weekly initial claims exceeded expectations.
After marking session lows thirty minutes into the trading day, the major
averages set off on a climb towards positive territory. As a result, the
S&P 500 finished flat. Norfolk Southern (NSC 65.00, -1.11) fell 9.1% after the
railroad lowered its guidance due to slumping demand and decreasing revenues
from fuel surcharges.DJ30 -17.46 NASDAQ +4.00 SP500 -0.11 NASDAQ Adv/Vol/Dec 1526/2.15
bln/993 NYSE Adv/Vol/Dec 1778/1.80 bln/1256