YAHOO [BRIEFING.COM]: A
rebound by the U.S. dollar and some technical resistance caused stocks to make
an early pullback from 2009 highs and spend the rest of the session trading in
lackluster fashion.
Broad-based buying in overseas
markets amid strong economic data from Asia and solid earnings from some major
industry players in Europe helped inspire a positive tone among U.S. participants
in the early going. That combined with renewed weakness in the U.S. dollar to
send the S&P 500 1.1% higher to a fractionally better 2009 high in the
first hour of trade.
However, the dollar managed to
garner support and swing the Dollar Index from a 0.3% loss and a fresh 52-week
low to a gain of 0.3% at its session high. It settled with a gain closer to
0.1%, but that was enough to keep stocks from extending their earlier gains.
Stocks were also stymied by
technical resistance as the 500 S&P flirted with the trend line for
2007-2008 highs, while the Dow tested its 50% retracement of the bear market
decline. Despite the resistance, the Dow was able to log its sixth straight
gain and register a new intraday high and closing high for 2009. The S&P
500 also set a fractionally better 2009 closing high, but a close above 1100
continues to elude the broader market index.
Technical resistance and a
firmer dollar kept the financial sector from providing the broader market with
much leadership, even though the sector spent virtually the entire session
showing strength. After being up more than 2%, financials settled with a 1.4%
gain.
Materials stocks also finished
solidly higher. The sector settled with a 0.9% gain, helped by strength among
commodities prices, which were generally higher in the face of the firmer
dollar. Before settling pit trade 1.1% higher at $1114.50 per ounce, gold hit
another record high of $1119.10 per ounce. That gave gold stocks a gain of 1.6%
and the SPDR Gold Trust (GLD 109.60, +1.21) a new record high.
Gains were generally broad
based as nine of the 10 major sectors finished with a gain. Utilities were the
only sector to post a loss; they settled 0.3% lower.
Retailers also had a weak
session after Macy's (M 17.86, -1.57) issued downside
guidance, but the group's 0.3% decline wasn't enough to derail the consumer
discretionary sector (+0.5%).
Advancing Sectors: Financials (+1.4%), Materials (+0.9%),
Tech (+0.6%), Consumer Discretionary (+0.5%), Industrials (+0.5%), Consumer
Staples (+0.3%), Telecom (+0.2%), Health Care (+0.2%), Energy (+0.1%)
Declining Sectors: Utilities (-0.3%)DJ30 +44.29 NASDAQ +15.82
SP500 +5.50 NASDAQ Adv/Vol/Dec 1672/1.87 bln/1006 NYSE Adv/Vol/Dec 1875/1.05
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