YAHOO [BRIEFING.COM]: The
stock market advanced for the tenth time in 11 sessions to set a new two-year
high as financials provided leadership in the face of a narrow gain by the
greenback. However, action was generally anemic again as share volume dwindled.
The major stock indices of
both Europe and Asia moved markedly higher overnight. Their gains helped
inspire buying at home, such that domestic averages gapped higher in the early
going.
Financials were quick to
provide leadership to the broader market as the sector settled with a 1.6%
gain. Bank stocks were especially strong. Diversified banks ripped to a 2.2%
gain while regional banks advanced 1.9%. Toronto-Dominion Bank (TD
71.95, +2.44) was a standout after the outfit confirmed its plan to take over
Chrysler Financial. The $6.3 billion acquisition comes as part of the firm's
expansionary effort.
Strength in the financial
sector helped push the S&P 500 through near-term resistance around the 1250
zone. A couple of hours was spent consolidating those gains along the 1254 line
before some late buying took the stock market to its best level since September
2008. The late move lost momentum, though, and the stock market settled in the
1254 to 1255 zone.
It is impressive that the
stock market's advance came after the dollar turned an early loss into a narrow
gain. Early weakness in the greenback came as the euro advanced after China's
Vice Premier expressed that his country supports efforts by the European Union
and International Monetary Fund to stem sovereign debt problems of the eurozone
and countries in its periphery. Gains by the euro were partly clipped by early
morning news that analysts at Moody's put Portugal's credit rating on review
for possible downgrade, but were later completely dashed shortly after analysts
at Fitch issued cautious commentary on Greece's credit rating.
Earnings news was limited.
Both Jabil Circuit (JBL 19.55, +1.89) and Adobe
Systems (ADBE 30.93, +1.75) posted better-than-expected earnings then
went on to issue upside guidance.
No economic data was issued
today. That certainly didn't help share volume, which has already been hampered
by the thinning of trading desks ahead of year-end holidays. A lack of
participation this session resulted in share volume of barely 800 million
shares on the NYSE.
Commodities were mixed today.
Soft commodities (+1.4%) led the way higher today after coffee futures surged
4.1%. Industrials also finished with a positive bias after cotton (+1.8%) and
copper (+1.7%) posted sizeable gains. Earlier this morning, helped by import
data in China and a force majeure at a Chilean mine, March copper traded to a
new all time high at $4.29 per pound.
Feb gold gained 0.1% to finish
at $1388.80 per ounce while March silver ended up 0.1% to $29.39 per ounce.
Both metals finished modestly higher despite some strength in the dollar.
Jan natural gas shed 4.2% to
end at $4.06 per MMBtu, giving back all of yesterday's gains, after it sold off
throughout the session. It closed just above session lows at $4.05. Feb crude
oil ended up 0.5% to $89.82 per barrel.
Advancing Sectors: Financials (+1.6%), Materials (+1.0%),
Energy (+0.9%), Industrials (+0.7%), Tech (+0.6%), Consumer Discretionary
(+0.5%), Telecom (+0.2%)
Declining Sectors: Consumer Staples (-0.4%), Health Care
(-0.2%), Utilities (-0.1%)DJ30 +55.03 NASDAQ +18.05 NQ100 +0.5% R2K +1.1% SP400
+0.7% SP500 +7.52 NASDAQ Adv/Vol/Dec 1928/1.65 bln/730 NYSE Adv/Vol/Dec
2079/809 mln/945