YAHOO [BRIEFING.COM]: The
latest FOMC policy statement and a weaker dollar helped bolster buying in
stocks, but some late selling caused stocks to rollover in the final hour and
close near the neutral line.
The major indices started the
session in higher ground as participants responded to strong overseas gains and
a downturn in the U.S. dollar. Gains among the major indices were both broad
and strong.
Participants also digested in
the early going the ADP Employment Change Report for October. The report
indicated that last month private payrolls fell by 203,000, which is a bit
worse than the 198,000 job losses that were widely expected. The ADP Report is
a precursor to the official nonfarm payrolls report on Friday.
In other economic news, the
ISM Services Index for October came in at 50.6. Though any reading above
50 denotes expansion, the October reading fell short of the 51.5 that had been
forecast.
Reaction to the data was
relatively muted as participants were largely focused on the latest FOMC policy
statement, which was released midafternoon. The directive indicated that the
FOMC will maintain the target range for the federal funds rate at 0.00% to
0.25% and it continues to anticipate that economic conditions are likely to
warrant exceptionally low levels of the federal funds rate for an extended
period.
The statement was met with a
volatile response by stocks, while the Dollar Index extended its losses. It
settled with a 0.7% decline, its worst single-session percentage drop in two
weeks.
As the dollar slid, both
stocks and commodities showed strength. Gold futures prices had hit a new
intraday record high around $1096.50 per ounce, but settled at $1087.30 per
ounce with a fractional gain. However, in electronic trade, gold prices have
ticked higher toward $1098 per ounce.
Meanwhile, oil futures prices
settled 1.0% higher at $80.36 per barrel, helped along by the weaker greenback
and an unexpected draw in weekly inventories. The gains by gold and oil helped
drive the materials sector and energy sector more than 1% higher, respectively.
Those gains vanished late in the session, though. The two sectors settled with
losses of 0.1% each.
Late weakness came about as a
broad-based selling effort took hold of stocks. Financials were at the center
of the downturn, however. Financials were up as much as 1.6% in the early
going, but steadily saw their gains erode before dropping sharply to a 1.5%
loss late in trading. Multiline insurers (-3.8%) were among the worst
performers in the sector.
However, managed care
providers (+3.8%) fared well and helped the health care sector to a 1.3% gain,
which was the best of any major sector. Strength in the sector came amid news
from the Associated Press that the Senate's top Democrat signaled that Congress
may fail to meet a year-end deadline for passing health care legislation. That
could make for an uncertain outcome in 2010.
Earnings played somewhat of a
supportive role in the early going, but had little lasting impact on this
session's trade. Kraft (KFT 26.67, -0.87) was the only Dow component to report. It
struggled as light revenue results overshadowed its better-than-expected
earnings.
In other earnings news,
broadcasters Time Warner (TWX 30.10, -0.06) and Comcast (CMCSA 14.06, -0.45) topped earnings expectations,
but oil drillers and services outfits Baker Hughes (BHI 40.89, -2.54) and Transocean (RIG 84.41, -1.50) missed earnings
estimates.
Advancing Sectors: Health Care (+1.3%), Tech (+0.7%),
Utilities (+0.7%), Consumer Staples (+0.5%), Telecom (+0.4%)
Declining Sectors: Financials (-1.5%), Industrials (-0.2%), Consumer
Discretionary (-0.1%), Energy (-0.1%), Materials (-0.1%)DJ30 +30.23 NASDAQ
-1.80 NQ100 +0.1% R2K -1.3% SP400 -0.5% SP500 +1.09 NASDAQ Adv/Vol/Dec
1048/2.23 bln/1631 NYSE Adv/Vol/Dec 1623/1.35 bln/1398