A new 52-week low for the Dollar Index and a generally pleasing batch of
economic data helped stocks make their way higher. However, buyers lacked the
potency to push through resistance near 2009 highs as participation lacked
ahead of the Thanksgiving holiday.
Renewed pressure against the U.S. dollar sent the Dollar Index to a 1.1%
loss, its worst single-session percentage drop in nearly four months. The drop
also put the Dollar Index at a fresh 12-month low, but gave a broad lift to the
equity market.
Participants were also generally pleased by the latest dose of data, which
showed that personal income for October increased 0.2% and personal spending
for October increased 0.7%. Respective increases of 0.1% and 0.7% had been
widely expected. Core personal consumption expenditures (PCE) for October made
a month-over-month increase of 0.2%, which exceeded the 0.1% increase that had
been forecast.
Initial jobless claims for the week ending November 21 fell more than
expected to 466,000, which marks the first time in one year that initial claims
fell below 500,000. Meanwhile, continuing claims fell more than expected to
5.42 million, which marks a multimonth low. However, the decline in continuing
claims still stems mostly from the expiration of unemployment benefits.
New home sales spiked a surprisingly strong 6.2% in October to an annualized
rate of 430,000. The consensus had called for a mere 0.4% increase.
The only disappointing piece of data came from the latest durable goods
orders report, which showed that orders fell 0.6% in October. The consensus had
called for a 0.5% increase. Orders less transportation fell 1.3%, but had been
expected to increase 0.7%. The considerable misses were countered by news that
orders and orders less transportation for the previous month were revised
higher to reflect an increase of 2.0% and 1.8%, respectively. That's double
what had initially been reported.
Amid the largely positive dose of data and the dollar's dramatic drop,
materials stocks made the strongest gains. The sector settled 1.5% higher.
Gold was a primary source of support for the materials sector. The yellow
metal finished 1.7% higher at $1185.50 per ounce after setting a new record
high near $1190 per ounce.
Oil prices also benefited from dollar weakness. Crude prices had started the
session in negative territory, but rebounded to finish with a 2.6% gain at
$77.96 per barrel. A slightly smaller-than-expected inventory build of 1.02
million barrels helped the move, but enthusiasm for that figure was initially
mitigated by a larger-than-expected
build of 1.0 million barrels of gasoline.
YAHOO [BRIEFING.COM]: Financials
made up the only sector in the S&P 500 that failed to make a gain. The
sector lost 0.2% as participants continued to push against shares of
diversified financial services players, which lost 0.9% as a group.
Despite broad-based gains, the
S&P 500 was unable to push through resistance near 1113, which marks its
2009 high. Stocks were still able to close near session highs, though their
gains were modest.
There wasn't much behind this
session's move, however. Trading volume didn't even break 800 million shares on
the NYSE. That's the lowest level in three months, but it shouldn't come as
much of a surprise since U.S. markets are closed tomorrow in observance of Thanksgiving.
Treasuries had a solid session
as the benchmark 10-year Note turned a loss of nearly 10 ticks into a gain of
roughly 10 ticks. That put the yield on the Note down to 3.26%, which is its
lowest level in one month. The rebound was helped by strong results from an
auction of 7-year Treasuries. The auction produced a yield of 2.84% and
attracted a bid-to-cover ratio of 2.76. That is above the previous auction's
bid-to-cover ratio and that of recent averages.
Advancing Sectors: Materials (+1.5%), Consumer
Discretionary (+1.0%), Energy (+1.0%), Utilities (+0.9%), Industrials (+0.7%),
Health Care (+0.5%), Telecom (+0.4%), Tech (+0.2%)
Declining Sectors: Financials (-0.2%)
Unchanged: Consumer StaplesDJ30 +30.69 NASDAQ +6.87 NQ100 +0.4%
R2K -0.1% SP400 +0.7% SP500 +4.98 NASDAQ Adv/Vol/Dec 1214/1.40 bln/1444 NYSE
Adv/Vol/Dec 2042/795 mln/960