YAHOO[BRIEFING.COM]:
Dour economic data and mixed earnings announcements gave market participants an
excuse to sell stocks and take profits this session. Stocks finished 3.3%
lower, ending a four-session streak of gains. Stocks are still up 1.6%
week-to-date, though.
Thursday's mood wasn't helped by news that December durable goods
orders declined 2.6%, marking the fifth straight monthly
decline. Excluding transportation, orders were down 3.6%. The drop in
both readings was also steeper than expected.
In other economic news, December new home sales declined more than
expected, falling almost 15% from the prior month. The supply of new homes is
at an all-time high of nearly 13 months, based on the pace of current sales.
Demand for new homes remains weak as weak labor markets limit buyers. Initial
jobless claims for the week ended Jan. 24 increased modestly to 588,000, which
exceeded the 575,000 claims expected. Continuing claims climbed to 4.78
million, which is the highest level for continuing claims in 40 years.
To help stimulate the ailing economy, the
With banks at the center of economic concerns, financial
stocks continue leading the broader market. Financials tumbled 8.4% to finish
at their session low. Losses were widespread in the sector, but life and health
insurers (-11.4%) saw some of the worst selling as Allstate (ALL 23.50, -6.14) missed analysts'
consensus earnings estimate.
With a market cap that's more than double the collective market
caps of the Dow's four financial firms, Exxon Mobil (XOM 77.00, -2.25) was the heaviest
weight on the broader market this session. It was also a laggard in the Dow.
Exxon reports its latest quarterly results ahead of tomorrow morning's opening
bell.
Fellow Dow component 3M
(MMM 56.43, +1.01) posted better-than-expected quarterly earnings results, but
lowered its 2009 earnings outlook. The revised outlook is still in-line with
estimates, though. It finished the session as a relative leader.
In other earnings news, Qualcomm
(QCOM 34.55, -2.27) fell short expectations, while Ford (F 1.95, -0.08) reported a loss, as
expected, but is drawing on its credit lines. Eli Lilly (LLY 37.97, -1.12) and Colgate-Palmolive (CL 65.22, +1.37) both beat expectations,
as did utilities American Electric
(AEP 32.70, +0.94) and Dominion
(D 36.21, +0.52).
Without any true leadership, the stock market finished near its
session lows. All 10 sectors in the S&P 500 finished in
the red.
Investors now turn their focus to the advance fourth quarter GDP
report, which is due tomorrow morning (8:30 AM ET). Given the challenges
facing the economy, the consensus forecast calls for a 5.5% annualized fourth
quarter decline in GDP. DJ30 -226.44 NASDAQ -50.50 SP500 -28.95
NASDAQ Adv/Vol/Dec 577/1.93 bln/2128 NYSE Adv/Vol/Dec 513/1.44 bln/2549