YAHOO [BRIEFING.COM]: In the
absence of any broader market catalysts, financials and tech issues led the
major indices to varied gains in the face of choppy trade.
This morning's mood was
generally subdued, but stocks were able to stage an early advance as financials
garnered support in the face of news that some Senate Democrats will propose to
expand the Volker Rule with new limits on proprietary trading by banks and
nonbank financial firms.
Citigroup (C 3.96, +0.14) was a strong performer
amid news that it has issued a $2 billion trust preferred offering. Renowned
analyst Dick Bove also issued positive comments on the stock. Meanwhile,
widely-followed financial analyst Meredith Whitney gave positive grades to Visa
(V 91.52, +1.37) and MasterCard (MA 249.60).
Banks were among the best
overall performers in the sector as regional banks scored a 2.9% gain and
diversified banks climbed 1.8%. The KBW Bank Index closed 2.2% higher.
Tech stocks also displayed
relative strength, which helped take the Nasdaq Composite to a fresh 52-week
high. The Nasdaq has advanced in eight of the past nine sessions, outperforming
its counterparts in each of the past three sessions.
The S&P 500 has also
advanced in eight of its last sessions, but it ran into resistance when it came
within striking distance of its 52-week high, which was set in mid-January.
Failure to push through resistance left stocks to roll over and surrender
gains.
Buyers stepped in to help
stocks recover from their slide, but the broad-based S&P 500 remains
roughly five points shy of its high.
In the week's first dose of
data, wholesale inventories for January slipped 0.2% when a 0.2% increase had
been expected. Though the decline can undermine GDP, some suggested that it
could be indicative of stronger-than-expected demand.
The Treasury's budget
statement for February showed a deficit of $220.9 billion, which was
essentially in step with the $222.0 billion consensus, but deeper than the
$193.9 billion deficit that was recorded in February 2009.
Neither the Treasury statement
nor the wholesale inventory data did anything for stocks.
In a widely-watched $21
billion auction of 10-year Notes, bidders showed up in strong numbers, such
that the bid -to-cover ratio was just shy of 3.5, which is well above recent
averages. The indirect bid was relatively modest, though; it came in at 35.1%.
The benchmark 10-year Note settled slightly lower, but that kept its yield a
few basis points above 3.70%.
A mixed finish for commodities
gave the CRB Commodity Index a fractional loss. Gold was a primary source of
weakness -- it settled 1.3% lower at $1108.20 per ounce. Oil prices gained 0.7%
to close pit trade at $82.09 per barrel. Oil prices had traded around $83 per
barrel, which marked a multiweek high, in the wake of a smaller-than-expected
inventory build of 1.43 billion barrels.
Trading volume on the NYSE hit
its highest level in nearly two weeks by totaling 1.14 billion shares. That
also put it above its 50-day moving average of 1.09 billion shares.
Advancing Sectors: Financials (+1.1%), Tech (+0.8%), Energy
(+0.6%), Industrials (+0.4%), Consumer Discretionary (+0.3%), Health Care
(+0.1%), Utilities (+0.1%)
Declining Sectors: Consumer Staples (-0.2%), Telecom (-0.1%),
Materials (-0.1%)DJ30 +2.95 NASDAQ +18.27 NQ100 +0.8% R2K +0.8% SP400 +0.8%
SP500 +5.16 NASDAQ Adv/Vol/Dec 1724/2.49 bln/957 NYSE Adv/Vol/Dec 2040/1.14
bln/985