YAHOO [BRIEFING.COM]: There
were plenty of trading catalysts this session, but participants were generally
subdued and left stocks to trade with moderate losses in light volume ahead of
the Thanksgiving holiday.
The stock market spent
virtually the entire session in negative territory after stocks had logged
solid gains in the previous session. Unlike the previous session, though, the
dollar bounced between moderate gains and losses before it finished flat.
Overseas markets also offered little support as they were hampered with
weakness; the Shanghai Composite closed 3.5% lower due, in part, to concern for
a lack of market-supportive measures from the country's officials.
Upon a second look, U.S. GDP
was determined to have expanded at a 2.8% rate in the third quarter. That was in
step with expectations, but it marked a considerable downward revision to the
3.5% increase that was posted as part of the advance GDP estimate.
Despite expectations for the
downward revision, the Fed raised its GDP target for 2009 to the range -0.4% to
-0.1% from the range -1.5% to -1.0%, according to the minutes from the November
4 FOMC meeting.
Though there is no empirically
proven corollary between consumer confidence and spending, participants showed
a short-lived, positive response to news that the November Consumer Confidence
Index improved to a better-than-expected reading of 49.5. Retailers showed some
strength early, but settled the session flat.
However, American
Eagle Outfitters (AEO 15.01, +0.47) was a strong performer after it
posted third quarter adjusted earnings that met expectations. Discount retailer
Dollar Tree (DLTR 51.33, +2.23) brought in
better-than-expected earnings and issued in-line guidance.
The biggest earnings
announcement came from Dow component Hewlett-Packard (HPQ
50.19, -0.83), however. The company posted in-line earnings that reflected its
preannouncement and affirmed an in-line outlook, which it had recently raised.
Still, the lack of positive surprises in the report left it to lag for the
entire session.
Financials proved to be the
biggest drag on trade, though. The sector fell 0.8%. Bank stocks had been under
pressure in the early going after Financial Times reported that the
Federal Reserve has asked nine of the nation's largest banks to outline how
they intend to repay TARP. Though regional banks (-0.3%) and diversified banks
(-0.4%) were able to limit their losses, diversified financial services
institutions (-1.5%) suffered. Even Bank of America (BAC
16.10, -0.19) couldn't be helped by news that analysts at Fitch placed the
lender's Individual Rating on Rating Watch Positive.
At the other end of the
performance scale was telecom. The sector finished 1.0% higher, but its lack of
weight in the broader market kept it from providing any real leadership.
Nonetheless, its gains extended its 2.6% advance in the previous session.
Health care was also a solid
performer. The sector closed with a 0.8% gain. Dow component Merck
(MRK 36.22, -0.20) failed to participate in the advance, but announced to
investors a new $3 billion share repurchase program.
Treasuries found support after
a directionless start. In turn, the benchmark 10-year Note advanced 12 ticks,
which lowered its yield to 3.30%. The advance followed results from an auction
of 5-year Treasuries. The auction fetched a bid-to-cover ratio of 2.81,
which is the highest bid-to-cover of the year for the maturity.
Trading volume on the NYSE
failed to eclipse 1.0 billion shares for the second straight session. The low
level of participation is expected to continue through this week, due to the
observance of Thanksgiving on Thursday.
Advancing Sectors: Telecom (+1.0%), Health Care (+0.8%),
Energy (+0.4%), Utilities (+0.3%), Consumer Staples (+0.1%)
Declining Sectors: Financials (-0.8%), Tech (-0.5%),
Industrials (-0.3%), Materials (-0.3%), Consumer Discretionary (-0.2%)DJ30
-17.24 NASDAQ -6.83 NQ100 -0.4% R2K -0.4% SP400 -0.3% SP500 -0.59 NASDAQ
Adv/Vol/Dec 1096/1.87 bln/1584 NYSE Adv/Vol/Dec 1386/952 mln/1628