YAHOO [BRIEFING.COM]: Stocks
looked like they were going to surrender solid gains as support dwindled in
afternoon trade, but as the S&P 500 approached the neutral line in the
final hour buyers stepped back in to hand stocks a solid finish.
Renewed weakness in the U.S.
dollar helped stocks overcome an early slip that followed a lower-than-expected
preliminary consumer sentiment reading of 66.0 for November from the University
of Michigan. Meanwhile, news of a deeper-than-expected trade deficit for
September had little impact on stocks, even though the data will play a role in
downward revisions to third quarter GDP calculations.
The dollar's decline remained
the primary focus of market participants this session. Following two
consecutive advances the greenback moved lower against a basket of major
foreign currencies. That caused the Dollar Index to give up 0.6%. The dollar's
drop came amid comments from World Bank President Zoellick that indicated the
U.S. is limited in its ability to address the weak dollar, while
representatives from China indicated that the country's currency would not gain
against the dollar in the short term.
Amid the dollar's downturn,
stocks were able to spend most of the session sporting broad-based gains, which
helped the S&P 500 climb as high as 1.0%. Though the broader market
surrendered some of its gains late in the session, stocks still finished firmly
higher. That helped the S&P 500 finish with a weekly gain of 2.3%.
Consumer discretionary stocks
made up the best performing sector this session. They advanced 1.6% as a group.
Abercrombie & Fitch (ANF 40.68, +3.92) was a primary
leader after it topped the consensus earnings estimate. JC Penney
(JCP 31.21, +1.82) missed earnings expectations, but garnered support during a
conference call when it expressed confidence in its sales plan. Nordstrom
(JWN 33.99, -0.52) was weak as an earnings miss overshadowed upside
guidance.
Financials showed relative
weakness for the entire session and made up the only major sector to finish
with a loss. Weakness among diversified banks (-1.9%) took the sector to a 0.3%
loss. Fifth Third (FITB 9.74, +0.20) provided some support,
though. Analysts at Credit Suisse initiated coverage on the stock with an
Outperform rating.
Trading volume was weak once
again as fewer than 1 billion shares exchanged hands on the NYSE. Trading
volume on the NYSE averaged just above 1 billion shares this week. The lack of
participation is often associated with a lack of conviction.
Advancing Sectors: Consumer Discretionary (+1.6%), Tech
(+0.9%), Utilities (+0.8%), Industrials (+0.7%), Consumer Staples (+0.7%),
Energy (+0.7%), Materials (+0.6%), Health Care (+0.2%)
Declining Sectors: Financials (-0.3%)
Unchanged: TelecomDJ30 +73.00 NASDAQ +18.86 NQ100 +0.9% R2K +1.0%
SP400 +1.0% SP500 +6.24 NASDAQ Adv/Vol/Dec 1774/1.90 bln/881 NYSE Adv/Vol/Dec
2206/985 mln/793