YAHOO [BRIEFING.COM]: A better-than-expected third quarter GDP
reading helped the stock market snap back from its worst loss in weeks, but it
wasn't enough to prevent stocks from heading into Friday with a week-to-date
loss in excess of 1%.
Despite some wavering in the first few minutes of trade, stocks put
together a steady ascent that took all 10 major sectors higher. The broad-based
gains stemmed from news that third quarter GDP surged to an annualized growth
rate of 3.5%. GDP was expected to increase 3.2% after contracting 0.7% in the
second quarter.
The stronger-than-expected growth overshadowed news that initial
jobless claims for the week ending Oct. 24 totaled 530,000, which is more than
the 525,000 initial claims that were widely expected and still uncomfortably
high.
Financial issues garnered the most support of the major sectors.
The sector surged 4.3%, which is its best single-session percentage gain in
three months. Life and health insurers (+7.6%) and multiline insurers (+6.7%)
saw some of the strongest gains following a positive earnings surprise from Lincoln Financial (LNC 25.34, +3.09) and an upgrade of Genworth Financial (GNW 10.18, +1.49).
Materials stocks also fared well. The sector climbed 3.2% as
broader market support and commodities and basic materials prices were propped
up by a drooping U.S. dollar, which sank 0.6% against a basket of major foreign
currencies in its first down session in one week.
Traders pushed oil prices up 3.1% to $79.89 per barrel, which
helped the energy sector to a 2.4% gain. Exxon Mobil (XOM 73.96, +0.12) eked out a gain, but
was generally a drag on the sector after it missed the consensus earnings
estimate.
Fellow Dow component Procter &
Gamble (PG 59.54, +2.31) posted a positive
earnings surprise, as did its competitor Colgate-Palmolive (CL 78.94, +1.26). Though their results
were strong, the consumer staples sector underperformed the broader
market.
Telecom lagged for the entire session and even spent the first half
trading with a loss as integrated telcos (-0.1%)
offset strength in Motorola (MOT
8.74, +0.78), which posted better-than-expected third quarter earnings and
issued an upside fourth quarter forecast.
With participants pushing many defensive-oriented issues aside in
favor of riskier holdings, Treasuries also came under pressure. That took the
benchmark 10-year Note down some 20 ticks, which lifted its yield back toward
3.5%. Treasuries caught additional attention as results from a $31 billion
auction of 7-year Treasuries drew a slightly stronger-than-expected bid-to-cover
ratio of 2.65.
Advancing Sectors:
Financials (+4.3%), Materials (+3.2%), Consumer Discretionary (+2.7%), Energy
(+2.4%), Industrials (+2.0%), Tech (+1.9%), Consumer Staples (+1.8%), Health
Care (+1.0%), Utilities (+0.9%), Telecom (+0.6%)
Declining Sectors:
(None)DJ30 +199.89 NASDAQ +37.94 NQ100 +1.7% R2K +2.5%
SP400 +2.2% SP500 +23.48 NASDAQ Adv/Vol/Dec 1877/2.33
bln/788 NYSE Adv/Vol/Dec 2502/1.45 bln/546