Weekly Recap - Week ending
19-Dec-08
Whether you recognize it or
not, a little bit of history is made every day. This week history was
made in a big way for the financial markets when the Federal Open Market
Committee (FOMC) cut the fed funds target rate from 1.00% to a
range of 0.00% to 0.25%.
In addition, the FOMC
directive implied the Fed stands ready to do any, and all, things possible to
stimulate the credit market and the economy, including possibly buying a lot of
long-term Treasury securities.
The move in Treasuries this
week was astounding. The 10-year note yield fell as many as 49 basis
points to 2.08% Thursday while the yield on the 30-yr bond dropped as many as
52 basis points to 2.52%.
This no holds barred approach
from the Fed fueled a sizable short-covering rally effort Tuesday that proved
to be as fleeting as snow on the ground in Houston this time of year.
When it comes down to it, the
directive conveyed a pretty bleak economic outlook, certainly for the
near-term, and made it apparent that the economic fix won't be quick and
easy. By the same token, neither will the fix for the stock market.
Even so, the stock market
pressed on with a bullish bias and closed higher for the week, led by the
transportation, health care, financial and retail sectors.
It was another week where bad
news didn't carry the same weight it once did.
Goldman Sachs (GS) reported its first loss as a
publicly-traded company and yet its stock traded higher after the news.
Best Buy (BBY) beat earnings estimates for its
third quarter but observed that there has been a dramatic and potentially
long-lasting change in consumer behavior. The translation is that the
consumer is in retrenchment mode. Best Buy's stock gained 15% this week.
Industrial production declined
0.6% in November, housing starts declined 18.9%, marking the largest decline
since March 1984, building permits hit a record low, and weekly initial jobless
claims held near a 26-year high.
Standard and Poor's lowered
its outlook (though not its rating) for AAA rated General Electric
(GE) and lowered its rating by one or two notches on 11 major U.S.
and European financial institutions.
Additional details were
heard about the Bernard Madoff Ponzi scheme, including the names of many
wealthy investors that got burned by Madoff's dealings.
OPEC, meanwhile, said it is
going to cut 4.2 million barrels a day from the actual September 2008 OPEC-11
production of 29.045 million barrels per day. News like that would be
expected to cause a spike in oil prices. There was a spike alright, only
it was a spike lower.
Oil for January delivery
tumbled 27% this week to $33.87 per barrel, with the majority of the decline
coming after the OPEC announcement.
The downturn in oil prices,
which touched $147 in July, is a positive for consumers and most
businesses, yet that silver lining is dulled for now by a host of issues, the
most nettlesome of which is a rising unemployment rate that is weighing heavily
on spending and investment decisions.
The energy sector (-4.6%) was
the worst-performing sector this week.
The drop in oil prices was all
the more striking given that the dollar had a tough week as growing concerns
about the U.S. government's increasing debt and interest rate differentials weighed
heavily on the greenback. The dollar index fell 6.0% at one point before
recovering some lost ground late in the week after Japan said it will undertake
efforts to weaken its currency.
In terms of government
spending, the big news came Friday with the Bush administration agreeing to
lend $17.4 billion in TARP funds to the automakers.
GM and Chrysler are going to
receive $13.4 billion and, if Congress approves the release of the other half
of the TARP funds, GM ill get access to another $4 billion in February.
The loans are being made on the contingency that the automakers have a viable
plan by March 31 to become profitable.
Friday's mixed market left it
clear that doubts remain.
In a separate, but not wholly
unrelated development, word circulated this week that President-elect Obama
might endorse a stimulus plan that costs as much as $850 billion.
Yes, Virginia, there is a
recession.
--Patrick J. O'Hare,
Briefing.com