YAHOO[BRIEFING.COM]: Weekly
Recap - Week ending 23-Jan-09
It was an historic week for
the country with Barack Obama being inaugurated the 44th President of the
United States. For the stock market, though, it was another bewildering
week that was governed with a sense of uncertainty about the financial sector
and the timing of an economic recovery.
Various forces combined to
cause second-guessing with respect to the conventional wisdom that the recovery
will round into form in the next six months. We won't capture them
all, but some of the bothersome developments included the following:
All told, the events of the week fed the bearish bias that has
persisted since the close of trading Jan. 2. The end result is that the
market slipped another 2.1%, bringing its year-to-date decline to 7.9%.
One of the sobering reminders the market provided participants this
week is that seemingly cheap stocks can indeed get cheaper. Microsoft was
the main case in point, followed by GE and any number of financial issues, like
Bank of America, Wells Fargo and State Street.
The residual message is that the risk premium tied to stock
selection continues to be high. Stocks can, and will, move to new lows on
further earnings estimate cuts and poor outlooks. In turn, it was evident
in the better-than expected earnings reports from IBM and Apple that good
earnings news these days is a company-specific happening.
In general, companies continue to bemoan the lack of visibility,
which leaves any earnings guidance that is offered in question.
Accordingly, we expect the bear market tendency of selling into strength to
continue.
One item that could certainly stem that reaction is a stabilization
of the financial sector, which dropped another 7.1% this week and is the core
driver of the market's frenetic behavior. What that stabilizing
factor is remains to be seen, although we suspect a refocused effort by the
Obama administration to get toxic assets off banks' balance sheets at market
prices would be viewed as a step in the right direction.
The financial sector is sure to be a focal point in the coming
week, which will be a busy one with 137 members of the S&P 500 due to
report their earnings results, an FOMC meeting Wednesday, and a barrage of
economic releases that are likely to contain more bad news.
The Q4 GDP report is the main event on the economic
calendar (just how bad were things?), which also features reports
throughout the week on existing home sales, consumer confidence, home prices,
durable orders, initial jobless claims, new home sales, and manufacturing
conditions in the Midwest region.
--Patrick J. O'Hare, Briefing.com
[Disclosure: (1)Briefing.com has a business relationship with
Microsoft (2)the analyst owns stock in GE]
**For interested readers, the S&P 400 Midcap Index, which
is not included in the table below, declined 3.0% for the week and is down 6.9%
year-to-date.
Index |
Started Week |
Ended Week |
Change |
% Change |
YTD % |
DJIA |
8281.22 |
8077.56 |
-203.66 |
-2.5 |
-8.0 |
Nasdaq |
1529.33 |
1477.29 |
-52.04 |
-3.4 |
-6.3 |
S&P 500 |
850.12 |
831.95 |
-18.17 |
-2.1 |
-7.9 |
Russell 2000 |
466.45 |
444.36 |
-22.09 |
-4.7 |
-11.0 |