YAHOO[BRIEFING.COM]: Weekly
Recap - Week ending 16-Jan-09
A bad start to the new year
got worse this week as each of the major indices suffered material
losses. The financial sector was at the heart of those losses as it plummeted
16% on the week amid a torrent of concerns about deteriorating credit quality
and the seemingly unending need by the banks to raise capital to plug
the gaping holes created by losses and writedowns on bad investments.
Bank of America (BAC) and Citigroup (C)
were the biggest trouble spots this week. Shares of the former dropped as
much as 46% at one point while shares of Citigroup fell as much as 59%.
Citigroup rattled investors
with a decision to sell a controlling interest in its Smith Barney brokerage
unit to Morgan Stanley (MS), which the market concluded was
more of a forced sale than anything else to raise capital. Citigroup
later announced, in conjunction with reporting an $8.3 billion fourth quarter
loss, that it would be splitting into two units as it attempts to downsize
its operations in meaningful fashion.
Ironically, it was Bank of
America's effort to super-size its operations that got it into a heap of
trouble with the market this week. Specifically, its acquisitions of
mortgage giant Countrywide and former investment banking giant Merrill
Lynch raised the bank's credit risk profile. That came back to hurt it in
a big way as evidenced by Bank of America reporting its first loss in 17 years
and needing an additional $20 billion in TARP funds to digest its Merrill Lynch
purchase.
Bank of America said it lost
$1.79 billion in the fourth quarter, yet that excludes a $15 billion loss at
Merrill Lynch. The need for additional governmental aid rankled the
market, which was dismayed by the seemingly poor due diligence performed by
Bank of America ahead of the Merrill purchase.
What's done is done now, but
the developments surrounding these two, major banks this week, as well as
a disappointing earnings report from JPMorgan Chase (JPM) that
was replete with an admission the bank is girding itself for a continued
deterioration in the economy and additional loan losses, served as a
wake-up call that there won't be a quick fix to the financial sector's
problems.
Unfortunately, that also means
there won't be a quick fix to the economy's problems.
President Obama (we'll give
him the official title now with his inauguration only days away) has stressed
on a number of occasions already the need to act quickly with a stimulus plan
to get the economy growing again. His initial hope was to be able to sign
a stimulus plan into law almost immediately upon taking office. It now
sounds as if the congressional debate on the bill will extend into February.
In the past week House
Democrats presented an $825 billion stimulus plan that calls for $550 billion
in spending and $275 billion in tax cuts. There isn't any point in
getting into the details since it will no doubt experience revisions, but it is
worth noting that the overall figure is in the ballpark of what the market was
expecting given views expressed by officials in the Obama administration.
The economic data in the past
week certainly provided the new president with ample reason to stress the
urgency of getting new stimulus flowing through the economy as soon as
possible.
December retail sales were
atrocious, declining 2.7% and falling for the sixth straight month.
Industrial production in the fourth quarter declined at an 11.5% annual
rate. The trade deficit narrowed sharply to $40.4 billion (from -$56.7
bln), with a $25 bln drop in imports and an $8.7 bln drop in exports reflecting
a sharp contraction in overall global trade.
After two weeks below 500,000,
weekly initial claims jumped 54,000 to 524,000. Although there was a
115,000 drop in continued claims, that improvement was quickly attributed to
people having exhausted their jobless benefits. More companies,
meanwhile, announced job cuts.
Both the PPI and CPI reports
actually brought some relatively good news. Core prices stayed out of negative
territory, providing a brief respite for the market from its deflation concerns
but certainly not expelling them. CPI, for example, was up a scant 0.1%
for 2008, which was the slowest rate of increase since 1954.
Separately, there wasn't much
to cheer about on the earnings front. Alcoa came up short of lowered
estimates, Intel reported a 90% drop in fourth quarter net income, and several
companies, including Tiffany & Co. (TIF), KLA-Tencor
(KLAC), Liz Claiborne (LIZ), NVIDIA
(NVDA), Motorola (MOT), Genentech (DNA), Estee
Lauder (EL), Johnson Controls (JCI), and Lubrizol
(LZ) issued sales and/or earnings warnings.
In brief, the events that
unfolded in the past week, which also included the ECB cutting its key lending
rate another 50 basis points to 2.00%, the Senate approving the next $350
billion of TARP funds, GM providing a 2009 U.S. industry wide auto sales
estimate that is the lowest in 27 years, and machinery orders in Japan being
the lowest on record, provided a sobering reminder that this slowdown is global
and deep.
To be sure, it made it
apparent that rallies like the one seen at the end of 2008 are still to be
viewed in a bear market context.
--Patrick J. O'Hare,
Briefing.com
**For interested readers,
the S&P 400 Midcap Index, which isn't included in the table below, declined
2.6% this week and is down 4.0% year-to-date.
Index |
Started Week |
Ended Week |
Change |
% Change |
YTD % |
DJIA |
8599.18 |
8281.22 |
-317.96 |
-3.7 |
-5.6 |
Nasdaq |
1571.59 |
1529.33 |
-42.26 |
-2.7 |
-3.0 |
S&P 500 |
890.35 |
850.12 |
-40.23 |
-4.5 |
-5.9 |
Russell 2000 |
481.30 |
466.45 |
-14.85 |
-3.1 |
-6.6 |