YAHOO [BRIEFING.COM]: Frequent
swings by the U.S. dollar caused stocks to spend most of the session chopping
along in a relatively narrow range, but some late support helped the major
equity averages make modest gains. Still, the action hasn't provided any
clarity to the market's near-term direction.
Stocks slipped in early trade
as the greenback trimmed its losses against competing currencies. The dollar's
move came as word surfaced that Standard & Poor's revised its outlook for
Spain to negative from stable. The news release came a day after Greece's
credit rating was cut by Fitch and Moody's made cautionary comments
regarding the potential consequences of the ballooning deficits of the U.S. and
U.K.
Reports indicated that the
U.S. government is not yet ready to leave the financial system completely to
itself when word surfaced that the $700 billion financial bailout plan, TARP,
will likely be extended until October 2010.
In other political news,
Senate Democrats reached a tentative agreement to remove the government-run
insurance portion of their health care reform plan. The announcement gave an
early lift to shares of managed care providers, but the group rolled over to
settle with a 0.2% loss.
Though the Dollar Index looked
like it got a lift from an early flight to safety, it was unable to trade with
any clear direction. Each of its attempts to pare losses was met with
resistance at the neutral line. It finished with a 0.3% loss.
The greenback was unable to
make a gain this session, but commodities still fell under a stiff bout of
selling pressure. That caused the CRB Commodity Index to drop 1.5%, its worst
showing this month.
Oil prices were a primary drag
on the CRB. Contracts for crude closed pit trade with oil priced 2.6% lower at
$70.70 per barrel, near fresh two-month lows. The move came even though weekly
inventory data showed a surprise draw of 3.82 million barrels.
Gold prices slid for a fourth
straight session. In the latest round of pit trade, prices for the yellow metal
fell 2.0% to settle at $1120.90 per ounce.
Despite such weakness, gold
stocks garnered particular support. The group gained 2.8%. That helped the
materials sector put together a 1.3% gain, which was the best of any major
sector.
Semiconductor stocks had a
relatively solid session. They advanced 0.6%, according to the Philadelphia
Semiconductor Index, even though Texas Instruments (TXN 25.99,
-0.34) fell sharply after it issued an increased earnings forecast.
While Texas Instruments traded
with weakness, many large-cap tech issues showed strength for the second
straight session. That helped the Nasdaq 100 gain 1.0%, more than double the
gain seen by the headline indices.
A weak session for Treasuries
concluded with the benchmark 10-year Note down roughly 11 ticks, which put its
yield back above 3.4%. Its weakness was worsened by softer-than-expected demand
in an auction of 10-year Notes. The auction produced a bid-to-cover ratio of
2.6, which was right at the average for the year, but down from the previous
auction's ratio of 2.8.
Consistent with recent trade,
action in the broader market this session was largely mixed and lacked clear
direction. Though stocks have struggled to hold fresh highs for 2009 in recent
weeks, dips have been short and shallow as many market
participants continue to step in and provide support as they try to chase
the easy gains that have been made since March.
Advancing Sectors: Materials (+1.3%), Tech (+0.9%), Health
Care (+0.6%), Financials (+0.4%), Utilities (+0.4%), Energy (+0.1%)
Declining Sectors: Consumer Discretionary (-0.2%)
Unchanged: Consumer Staples, Industrials, TelecomDJ30 +51.08
NASDAQ +10.74 NQ100 +1.0% R2K +0.1% SP400 +0.1% SP500 +4.01 NASDAQ Adv/Vol/Dec
1355/1.92 bln/1326 NYSE Adv/Vol/Dec 1644/1.08 bln/1344