YAHOO [BRIEFING.COM]: Despite
some of the worst jobs data in decades, stocks managed to finish the session
with impressive gains after reversing early losses.
From its session low to its
session high, the stock market moved from a loss of 3.2% to a gain of 4.1%. It
closed with a gain of 3.7%. Stocks finished every session this week with a gain
or loss of at least 2.5%. It has been six months since the stock market
finished a week without closing at least 1.0% higher or lower in any of the
week's sessions.
Stocks fell into an early funk
as participants chewed on a 533,000 drop in November nonfarm payrolls, which is
far worse than the 335,000 drop that was expected. November manufacturing
payrolls declined 85,000, which was actually less than the 100,000 decline that
was widely expected. The unemployment rate, now at 6.7%, is the highest in
roughly 15 years. The elevated unemployment rate comes as companies lay off
workers as part of an attempt to shave expenses amid stiffening economic
headwinds.
Recognition of such stiff
economic challenges prompted selling in commodities. The CRB Commodity Index
dropped roughly 4.3%, while oil dropped around 6.0% to close just above $41 per
barrel. Oil's drop took it to its lowest closing level in four years.
Oil's slide weighed on the
energy sector for much of the session. The sector traded with a loss of as much
as 5.8%. However, broad-based buying pulled the sector into the green, helping
it finish with a 1.3% gain.
The broad-based buying effort
followed gains in the financial sector, which consistently outperformed the
other sectors throughout the session. Financials closed 8.6% higher, led by
multiline insurers (+17.5%), like Hartford Financial (HIG 14.59, +7.38). Hartford's share price
more than doubled after the company issued upside guidance for fiscal 2008.
Despite the massive gain, HIG is still down 85% from its 52-week high.
Elsewhere in the financial
sector, the Justice Department said the Treasury is legally bound to inject
capital into government-sponsored enterprises, according to Dow Jones. On a
related note, Reuters reports the Federal Reserve bought $5 billion in debt
from Fannie Mae (FNM 0.87, +0.00), Freddie Mac (FRE 0.86, -0.02), and FHBL.
Executives of the Big 3
automakers have been making their own case for government funding. General Motors (GM 4.08, -0.03), Ford (F 2.72, +0.06), and Chrysler are asking
Congress for billions to stave off bankruptcy. According to The Wall Street
Journal, Chrysler has already hired legal firm Jones Day to provide a
comprehensive analysis of the options available to the automaker.
Congressional officials
continue to discuss the necessary checks and balances of providing the
automakers with taxpayers' funds, making the likelihood of a speedy, clear plan
uncertain.
Despite ongoing uncertainty surrounding automakers and the broader economy, stock investors successfully put together a solid rebound Friday, helping soften the week's downturn. The stock market finished the week with a 2.3% decline. That prompted bond investors to take some profits, sending the 10-year Treasury Note down around 48 ticks and pushing its yield to 2.71%. The Note's yield fell to its lowest level in decades during the prior session, around 2.54%.DJ30 +259.18 NASDAQ +63.75 NQ100 +4.4% R2K +4.9% SP400 +4.8% SP500 +30.85 NASDAQ Adv/Vol/Dec 1874/2.23 bln/861 NYSE Adv/Vol/Dec 2187/1.62 bln/914