YAHOO [BRIEFING.COM]: Profit
takers attempted to reverse early gains that were spurred by
better-than-expected economic data, but an underlying bid helped stocks rebound
to finish at their best levels in months.
The latest ADP Employment
Report estimated that 491,000 jobs were cut from private payrolls in April.
Though that is certainly a high number, it isn't nearly as bad as the 645,000
job cuts that were expected. It is also down substantially from the 708,000 job
losses recorded for the prior month, which fits the idea that the economy is
bottoming.
The idea that the economy has
started to bottom has lured money in from the sidelines in recent weeks.
Recently released data indicate that the end of March brought the biggest
sequential inflow of funds into mutual fund assets on a percentage basis since
April 2003, and the biggest inflow of absolute funds since April 2008.
The inflow of money has
compounded gains in recent weeks, taking the stock market up 38% from its March
6 low. That has many market watchers anticipating a pullback.
However, there is a persistent
bid that seems to stymie downside moves from gaining traction. Just so, this
session's early gains were reversed by profit takers, but that gave way to a
rebound that gathered momentum as participants looked to scoop up financials.
Financials were under pressure
in premarket trading, but actually rallied into the open after reports quelled
concern that major banks may need to raise outside capital in order to satisfy
the government's bank stress tests. The Wall Street Journal reported JPMorgan
Chase (JPM 37.22, +2.40) does not need additional capital and Citigroup's
(C 3.86, +0.55) capital hole is considerably smaller than Fed
officials initially identified, while separate reports indicated that Bank
of America (BAC 12.69, +1.85) needs only to convert its capital to a
larger proportion of common stock.
The official findings of the
bank stress tests aren't due until after tomorrow's close, but leaking the news
should help mitigate against any shock that would result from unveiling the
results all at once.
Financial stocks won
additional favor after news sources reported that the Senate has approved an
amendment that could make it less costly to exit the TARP program. Shares of
diversified banks and regional banks both finished 12.7% higher. The broader
financial sector closed near its session high with an 8.1% gain.
Energy stocks climbed 3.6%,
contributing to the broader market's advance. Energy stocks were bolstered by
higher oil prices, which advanced 4.6% to settle at a five-month closing high
of $56.34 per barrel. The move was helped largely by the notion
that demand will improve with economic conditions in the back half of this
year. Crude's advance was also helped along by relatively bullish inventory
data, which indicated oil inventories for the week ending May 1 increased by
605,000, far less than the 2.5 million barrel build that was widely expected.
With oil prices on the rise,
shares of oil and gas explorers advanced 7.1%, while oil and gas equipment
companies climbed 4.0%, and drillers gained 2.6%. Offshore specialist Transocean
(RIG 74.59, +1.62) was able to win additional support by posting this
morning better-than-expected quarterly results.
United Technologies (UTX 52.29, +0.46) reaffirmed its full
year 2009 guidance, but General Electric (GE 13.67, +0.57) was
the primary leader among industrial stocks. Industrials finished with a 1.7%
gain.
Despite the early efforts of
profit takers, the S&P 500 spent the entire session in positive territory.
Though it encountered some resistance when it approached the 920 level, the
stock market still closed at its best level since early January.
The move was supported by
strong trading volume. Nearly 1.9 billion shares traded hands on the NYSE this
session; that's the most in a single session since mid-April, and above recent
averages. DJ30 +101.63 NASDAQ +4.98 NQ100 +0.0% R2K +0.5% SP400 +0.9% SP500
+15.73 NASDAQ Adv/Vol/Dec 1504/2.91 bln/1193 NYSE Adv/Vol/Dec 2171/1.88 bln/898