YAHOO [BRIEFING.COM]: Tempered
concerns related Dubai's debt debacle prompted participants to put pressure on
the U.S. dollar as they rotated into riskier plays. The move favored stocks,
which logged impressive, broad-based gains.
Affirmations from Dubai World
that it is working to restructure a smaller load of debt than initially feared
helped calm concerns about a potential default by the state-owned conglomerate.
On Monday afternoon word had begun to circulate that Dubai wanted to
renegotiate the terms of $26 billion in debt, rather than the $60 billion that
was first rumored.
The news helped give a lift to
global indices and caused currency traders to step away from the greenback.
With the dollar drooping again, the Dollar Index returned to 52-week lows
before paring losses to finish with a 0.5% loss.
The pullback in the greenback
stirred broad interest in both equities and commodities. That combination
proved particularly beneficial for materials stocks and energy stocks, which
finished with respective gains of 1.6% and 1.4%.
Materials stocks were led by
gold plays, which advanced 3.8% as gold prices climbed to a new record high
near $1204 per ounce before they closed pit trade with a 1.5% gain at $1200.20
per ounce. Newmont Mining (NEM 55.66, +2.02) was a primary
leader while Kinross Gold (KGC 21.10, +1.08) also provided
support. Shares of KGC had the added benefit of an upgrade from analysts at
JPMorgan.
Oil prices also fared well.
Crude contract prices closed 1.5% higher at $78.46 per ounce. That favored oil
and gas exploration outfits (+2.1%).
Retailers rebounded to a 1.8%
gain after a slip in the previous session. Better-than-expected earnings and a
strong revenue forecast from Guess (GES 41.82, +4.77) helped
the company's shares outperform the rest of the pack and log their best
single-session percentage gain since March.
Though all 10 major sectors
finished in higher ground, financials lagged. The sector settled with a mere
gain of 0.1% as consumer finance stocks (-0.8%) dragged. Bank stocks
(unchanged) also had a lackluster session, even though analysts Citigroup
upgraded shares of regional lenders Fifth Third (FITB 10.18,
+0.10) and BB&T (BBT 25.60, +0.70). Banking issues had
been one of the best performing industry groups in the previous session.
There were only a few
corporate headlines this session, including news from CNBC that General
Electric (GE 16.17, +0.15) has reached a deal to sell NBC Universal to
Comcast (CMCSA 14.97, +0.31). Many of GE's investors have long
called for the divestment in favor of higher growth opportunities. NBC
Universal accounted for less than 10% of GE's revenue in 2008.
Ford Motor (F 8.88, -0.01) surrendered its gains
following news that its November sales were flat, which is short of the 4.1%
increase that many had come to expect. Meanwhile, Toyota Motor
(TM 81.45, +2.91) said its U.S. division saw sales increase 11.5% in November. Honda
Motor (HMC 32.36, +1.37) saw November North American sales increase
5.5%.
Economic data did little for
participants. The ISM Manufacturing Index for November came in at 53.6, which
is below the 55.0 that was widely expected and down from the 55.7 that was
registered in October.
Construction spending for
October was flat month-over-month. It was expected to decline 0.5%. The
previous month's 0.8% increase was completely reversed to reflect a 1.6%
decline.
Pending home sales for October
made a month-over-month jump of 3.7%, which is better than the 1.0% decline
that many had expected. The increase for October wasn't quite as strong as the
6.0% increase that was registered in September.
Advancing Sectors: Utilities (+1.8%), Telecom (+1.7%),
Materials (+1.6%), Energy (+1.4%), Industrials (+1.4%), Consumer Discretionary
(+1.3%), Consumer Staples (+1.3%), Health Care (+1.3%), Tech (+1.3%),
Financials (+0.1%)
Declining Sectors: (None)DJ30 +126.74 NASDAQ +31.21 NQ100
+1.2% R2K +1.6% SP400 +1.5% SP500 +13.23 NASDAQ Adv/Vol/Dec 1883/2.19 bln/849
NYSE Adv/Vol/Dec 2431/1.13 bln/615