YAHOO [BRIEFING.COM]: The
major stock indices extended their 2009 highs late this session by overcoming
losses that stemmed from a sell-the-news reaction to quarterly reports from
Goldman Sachs and Citigroup.
The broader market spent most
of the session with modest losses, which came amid considerable weakness in the
financial sector. Financials were down as much as 1.7% following
better-than-expected earnings from Goldman Sachs (GS 188.63, -3.65) and Citigroup (C 4.75, -0.25), both of which benefited
in the previous session from an upbeat report from JPMorgan Chase (JPM 47.16, +0.00). However, the gains
during the previous session effectively priced in this morning's positive
surprise, prompting participants to sell the shares and take profits as the
news hit.
Weakness in the financial
sector weighed on the broader market for the entire session, but a late lift
helped the sector pare its losses so that it finished with a loss of 0.7%.
The late lift was led by the
energy sector, which settled with a 2.0% gain. That is more than twice the gain
of the next best performing sector (utilities, +0.9%). Energy's advance came as
refiners (+8.0%) surged and oil and gas equipment stocks (+3.4%) and oil and
gas driller stocks (+3.2%) spiked with a sharp rise by oil prices. News that
weekly oil inventories increased by a smaller-than-expected 334,000 barrels
helped send oil futures prices to new 2009 highs of $77.97 per barrel. Oil
prices settled at $77.58 per barrel with a 3.2% gain.
Energy's strength helped the
broader market finish at session highs, which extended the gains made in the
previous session. The broader market is now up more than 21% year-to-date.
Despite that accomplishment, the S&P 500 is just now at levels first seen
in 1998.
Market participants were
generally unfazed by the latest batch of economic data, which featured a 0.2%
increase in consumer prices and core consumer prices for September. The
consensus called for a 0.2% increase in CPI and a 0.1% increase in core CPI.
Initial jobless claims for the week ending October 10 totaled 514,000, which
was a bit below the consensus forecast of 520,000 initial claims and down
10,000 from the previous week. Continuing claims slipped below 6.0 million for
the first time since March by coming in at 5.99 million. The consensus called
for an even 6.00 million continuing claims.
The Empire State Manufacturing
Index for October came in at 34.57, which topped the 17.25 that was widely
expected, while the Philadelphia Fed Index for October came in at 11.5, which
is fractionally below the 12.0 reading that was expected. Still, the Philly Fed
Index has showed three straight positive readings, which hasn't happened for
roughly two years.
Advancing Sectors: Energy (+2.0%), Utilities (+0.9%),
Consumer Staples (+0.8%), Telecom (+0.7%), Health Care (+0.6%), Materials
(+0.4%), Industrials (+0.3%), Consumer Discretionary (+0.1%)
Declining Sectors: Financials (-0.7%)
Unchanged: Tech DJ30 +47.08 NASDAQ +1.06 NQ100 -0.1% R2K -0.1% SP400
+0.3% SP500 +4.54 NASDAQ Adv/Vol/Dec 1162/2.18 bln/1508 NYSE Adv/Vol/Dec
1509/1.36 bln/1502