YAHOO [BRIEFING.COM]: Tuesday's
trade concluded in lackluster fashion as an absence of leadership left
stocks to drift during the afternoon, unable to reclaim their initial gains.
Stocks had started the session
in higher ground as a better-than-expected S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price
Report for July brought about some modest support. The report's 20-City
Composite showed a 13.3% year-over-year decline, which wasn't as bad as the
14.2% decline that was expected.
However, the solid state of
things quickly became unsettled by news that the September Consumer Confidence
Index pulled back to 53.1 from 5.4.5 in August. The dip was unexpected;
economists, on average, had been expecting a reading of 57.0.
The major indices were unable
to fully recover from the flurry of selling that followed the disappointing
consumer confidence reading.
News that the FDIC will
require insured institutions to prepay estimated quarterly risk-based
assessments into 2012 seemed to weight on bank stocks, though the announcement
was generally expected. Diversified bank stocks fell 1.9%.
Consumer finance stocks were
hit just as hard. They fell 1.9% amid news that the Fed has approved rules
amending the transparency and disclosure of terms in credit card agreements.
Bright spots were limited, but
shares of Walgreen (WAG 37.35, +3.16) logged their best single-session percentage
advance in six months after the company posted better-than-expected quarterly
earnings. The drug retailer helped consumer staples stocks stay in the green
for the entire session.
Advancing Sectors: Consumer Discretionary +0.5%,
Consumer Staples +0.4%, Utilities +0.2%, Materials +0.1%
Declining Sectors: Tech -0.7%, Energy -0.6%, Financials -0.5%,
Telecom -0.5%, Industrials -0.2%, Health Care -0.1%DJ30 -47.16 NASDAQ -6.70
NQ100 -0.4% R2K -0.5% SP400 +0.3% SP500 -2.37 NASDAQ Adv/Vol/Dec 1111/2.10
bln/1568 NYSE Adv/Vol/Dec 1435/1.18 bln/1555