YAHOO [BRIEFING.COM]:
The major averages began the day on a mixed note before selling pressure pushed
the key indices to their respective lows. This morning, House Speaker John
Boehner addressed the media in Washington. During his remarks, the speaker
suggested President Obama is not serious about cutting spending, and the White
House is willing to go over the fiscal cliff. Mr. Boehner's remarks had little
impact on the markets, which continued pushing to fresh lows. However, a
late-afternoon headline indicated Speaker Boehner and President Obama will meet
in person at 17:00 ET. The report lifted the S&P 500 off its worst level of
the day, but the benchmark index still finished with a loss of 0.6%.
The energy sector underperformed, and the SPDR Energy
Select Sector ETF (XLE 71.49, -0.67) lost 0.9%. Looking at notable decliners, Nabors
Industries (NBR 13.85, -0.68) fell 4.7% after Jefferies downgraded the stock
to ‘Underperform' from ‘Hold.'
Anadarko Petroleum (APC 74.75, -0.79) slid 1.1%
despite Jefferies making positive comments about the company. The remarks
followed the closing arguments in the court case brought against APC by
chemical producer Tronox (TROX 15.58, -0.47).
Elsewhere in energy, coal stocks were mixed. CONSOL Energy (CNX 33.81, -0.44) shed 1.3%
while Walter Energy (WLT 36.26, +0.39) advanced 1.1%.
Technology stocks lagged notably and Apple (AAPL 529.69, -9.31) slipped
1.7%. Semiconductor manufacturers also weighed as the PHLX Semiconductor index
settled lower by 1.1%. Among individual producers, Cirrus Logic (CRUS 27.41, -1.71) was the
biggest laggard, down 5.9%.
Consumer staples outperformed the remaining S&P 500 sectors. Boston Beer (SAM 131.94, +17.71) surged
15.5% after the brewer raised its 2012 earnings expectations as well as the
2013 depletion projections. Following the update, the company sees 2012
earnings between $4.30 and $4.60, while the Capital IQ consensus estimate
expects earnings at $4.24 per share.
Elsewhere, B&G Foods (BGS 29.53, +1.06) rose by 3.7%
following an upgrade to ‘Outperform' from ‘Sector Perform' at RBC Capital
Markets.
Also of note, CVS Caremark (CVS 48.50, +0.96) added 2.0%
after raising its dividend by 38% to $0.22 per share. In addition, the company
guided full-year earnings above consensus estimates.
Recent strength in defense stocks has lifted the PHLX Defense Sector Index to
an all-time high. After reaching fresh highs on Wednesday, the index has been
under pressure. Today, the defense index slid 1.0% and 15 of 17 components
declined. Aircraft manufacturers Lockheed Martin (LMT 89.99, -1.82) and Embraer (ERJ 25.10, -0.71) were the two
weakest performers, down 2.0% and 2.8%, respectively. Earlier, the New York
Times reported the Canadian government will reconsider its planned purchase of F-35
fighter jets from Lockheed Martin due to high costs.
In notable news, Best Buy (BBY 14.12, +1.94) spiked 15.9%
after CNBC reported company founder Richard Schulze is expected to submit a bid
worth between $5 and $6 billion in his attempt to take the company private by
week's end. Also of note, Chief Financial Officer Sharon McCollam bought over
100,000 shares on December 10, 2012.
The market received several economic reports today, and the data points were
largely in-line with expectations. The latest weekly initial jobless claims
count totaled 343,000, which was lower than the 375,000 that had been expected
by the Briefing.com consensus. The tally was also below the revised prior week
count of 372,000. As for continuing claims, they fell to 3.198 million from
3.221 million.
November retail sales rose by 0.3%, which was slightly worse than the 0.4%
increase that had been broadly expected. The prior month's reading pointed to a
decrease of 0.3%. Excluding autos, retail sales were unchanged, which was
in-line with the Briefing.com consensus.
Overall producer prices declined during November by 0.8%, which was cooler than
the 0.5% decrease that had been widely forecast. Core producer prices rose by
0.1%, which was in-line with the Briefing.com consensus.
During October, inventories rose by 0.4%, which was in-line with the
Briefing.com consensus. Today's reading follows the prior month's increase of
0.7%.
Crude oil fell after
two sessions of gains as renewed concerns over the "fiscal cliff"
overshadowed yesterday's Fed announcement. The energy component briefly poked
into positive territory and touched a session high of $86.97 per barrel.
However, prices quickly tumbled as low as $85.81 per barrel and settled the
session 1.0% lower at $85.90 per barrel.
Natural gas extended yesterday's losses, falling to a session low of $3.29 per
MMBtu following weaker-than-anticipated inventory data that showed a build of 2
bcf when a draw of 3 to 4 bcf was expected. Despite inching upwards in
afternoon pit action, it settled 0.9% lower at $3.35 per MMBtu.
Precious metals fell as yesterday's Fed-related momentum faded and investors
reacted to economic data that included better-than-anticipated Jobless Claims
and weak Retail Sales. Gold dipped to a session low of $1690.70 per ounce in
morning floor action and spent the remainder of the session chopping around
just slightly above that level. It eventually settled at $1697.10 per ounce, or
1.2% lower. Silver inched lower into negative territory after sliding off its
session high of $32.81 per ounce. It touched a session low of $32.28 per ounce
moments before closing with a 4.2% loss at $32.38 per ounce.
Tomorrow morning, November CPI and core CPI will be reported at 8:30 ET.
Lastly, November industrial production and capacity utilization will be
announced at 9:15 ET.DJ30 -74.73 NASDAQ -21.65 SP500 -9.03 NASDAQ Adv/Vol/Dec
929/1.78 bln/1546 NYSE Adv/Vol/Dec 911/663.2 mln/2120