YAHOO [BRIEFING.COM]: Equities
showed indecision in the early going as trade hovered around the flat line for
the first 90 minutes before the S&P 500 slid to a session low near 1350.
The level provided some support for the benchmark index which managed to cross
into positive territory before sellers retook control and drove it back down to
session lows. However, the average received a considerable bid in the final
minutes of the session and ended with a loss of 0.2%.
Financial stocks felt the brunt of yesterday's sell-off. As the nation's
leaders discuss ways to avoid falling off the fiscal cliff, bank stocks will be
especially sensitive to hints of a possible agreement. Today, major financials
saw gains. Bank of America (BAC 9.09, +0.10), Citigroup (C 35.21, +0.19), and Morgan Stanley (MS 16.26, +0.17) advanced between 0.5%
and 1.1%.
Looking at technology bellwethers, Apple (AAPL 525.62, -11.26) slid 2.1% to extend
its recent slide. Since its September highs, the stock has lost over 25% in
value as it searches for its next level of support. Meanwhile, Intel (INTC 20.03, +0.07) advanced 0.4% to snap
its nine-day losing streak. The stock has lost nearly 10% since the start of
November.
Networking companies continued seeing strong earnings. Yesterday, Cisco Systems (CSCO 17.94, +0.28) rallied after its
quarterly report. Today, NetApp (NTAP 30.20, +3.07) surged 11.4% after beating on the bottom
line. The networking company exceeded earnings expectations by $0.03 and
reported in-line revenue. Following the report, Raymond James upgraded shares
of NetApp to ‘outperform' from ‘market perform.'
In other earnings news, Wal-Mart (WMT 68.72, -2.59) reported third quarter
earnings of $1.08 on $113.93 billion in revenue. The retail giant's bottom line
beat the Capital IQ consensus estimate by $0.01, while the revenue missed
expectations. The company's guidance was mostly in-line as it expects fourth
quarter earnings between $1.53 and $1.58. Wal-Mart lost 3.6% in response to
this morning's results while peer, Target (TGT 62.44, +1.06), gained 1.7% after its
in-line quarter.
Stocks in the materials space traded largely in-line with the broader market.
However, weakness among steel producers weighed on the sector. AK Steel (AKS 3.63, -0.39) fell 9.7% after the
company announced the pricing of $500 million in senior notes set to mature in
2018 and 2019. In addition, AK Steel priced 22 million shares of common stock
at a public offering price of $4.00 per share. Looking at other steelmakers, Steel Dynamics (STLD 12.29, -0.42) and Reliance Steel (RS 53.71, -0.79) settled lower by 3.3%
and 1.5%, respectively.
The Dow Jones Transportation Average traded in-line with the remaining
industrials. The bellwether complex shed 0.2% as 12 out of the 20
transportation stocks saw losses. This morning, United Continental (UAL 19.51, -0.47) experienced technical
difficulties which resulted in some flight delays. United lost 2.4%, while
rivals Alaska Air
(ALK 40.88, +0.36), JetBlue Airways (JBLU 5.03, +0.05), and Southwest Airlines (LUV 8.84, +0.08) all gained between 0.9%
and 1.1%. Airline stocks displayed relative strength after yesterday's sell-off
weighed on the group and caused Delta and JetBlue to lose near 6.0% each.
A number of economic data points were reported today. Most notably, the
Philadelphia Fed Survey slipped to -10.7 for November. This follows October's
reading of -1.9 while economists polled by Briefing.com had expected that the
Survey would improve to a reading of 0.0.
The latest weekly initial jobless claims count totaled 439,000, which was
higher than the 388,000 that had been expected by the Briefing.com consensus.
The tally was ahead of the revised prior week count of 361,000. As for
continuing claims, they rose to 3.334 million from 3.163 million.
October consumer prices increased by 0.1%, which was in-line with the
Briefing.com consensus forecast of a 0.1% increase. Today's reading follows
prior month's 0.6% increase. In addition, core prices rose by 0.2% which was
slightly hotter than the generally expected increase of 0.1%.
Separately, the Empire Manufacturing Survey for November registered a reading
of -5.2, which was up from the prior month's reading of -6.2. Economists polled
by Briefing.com had expected that the Survey would slip to -8.5.
Commodities ended the day
lower. Natural gas futures were volatile as usual and after whipping around to
its LoD of $3.69 and then to its HoD of $3.83, the energy component ended
today's session 2% lower at $3.77/MMBtu.
Dec crude oil sold off hard, dropping about $2/barrel to its lowest level of
the day (LoD was $84.71/barrel). By the time today's floor trading session
ended, crude oil was 1% lower at $85.45/barrel.
Precious metals also ended today's session in the red. Both gold and silver
tanked about an hour after floor trading began, hitting their lowest
levels of the day. Dec gold finished 1% lower today at $1713.90 and Dec silver
finished 0.6% lower at $32.63/oz.
Tomorrow, September net long-term TIC flows will be reported at 9:00 ET. In
addition, October industrial production and capacity utilization will both be
announced at 9:15 ET. Also note that November options are set to expire
tomorrow.DJ30 -28.57 NASDAQ -9.87 SP500 -2.17 NASDAQ Adv/Vol/Dec 951/1.97
bln/1507 NYSE Adv/Vol/Dec 998/779.4 mln/2092