YAHOO [BRIEFING.COM]: Stocks
spent the session in a sideways chop, but managed to settle with solid gains.
The advance came in the face of modest strength in the U.S. dollar, weakness
among financial issues, and a mixed weekly jobless claims report. Participation
lacked for most of the session, though.
Trade was choppy for the
entire session, but that didn't take stocks out of a relatively narrow range,
nor did it derail a broad-based advance. There was a flurry of selling late in
the session that caused stocks to surrender some of their gains, but the
broader market was able to garner support as the S&P 500 came in contact
with the 1100 mark.
In the end, advancing issues
outnumbered decliners by more than 2-to-1. As broad as the advance was, it was
even more impressive since it came despite a stronger dollar. Gains by the
greenback have most often led to selling in the stock market, due to the drag
of a stronger dollar on commodity prices and repatriated profits from
multinationals, but stocks were able to hold their gains as the Dollar Index
worked its way to a 0.1% gain.
Though the broader market
showed resolve, financials lagged for the entire session. The sector settled
with a 0.2% loss as ongoing chatter about a potential equity raise by Citigroup
(C 3.87, +0.01) to repay its TARP funds failed to attract support for
the sector. Citi has yet to unveil an official plan.
On a related note, Treasury
Secretary Geithner appeared before the Congressional Oversight Panel to make a
case for extending the $700 billion TARP plan. Geithner expressed that TARP
will help the U.S. maintain the capacity to address potential threats to its
financial system and decrease the need for future intervention.
Some market watchers consider
it unclear why Treasury wants to extend TARP, but has reportedly let some
financial outfits entertain the prospect of TARP repayment.
Initial jobless claims for the
week ending Dec. 5 totaled 474,000, which is worse than the 455,000 initial
claims that had been widely expected and is up from the previous week's tally
of 457,000 initial claims. However, continuing claims made a sharp move down to
5.16 million from 5.46 million. The consensus had called for 5.45 million
continuing claims.
The trade deficit for October
totaled $32.9 billion, which is less than the $36.8 billion deficit that had
been widely expected. It is also an improvement from the upwardly revised $35.7
billion deficit that was registered in September. Meanwhile, the November
Treasury Budget was expected to show a shortfall of $131.6 billion, but it was
less steep at $120.3 billion.
An auction of 30-year Bonds
attracted a bid-to-cover ratio of 2.45, which is largely in-line with the
recent average of 2.41. A lot of commentary focused on the fact that yield had
to reach 4.52% to spur interest, but half the bidders were willing to take a
yield below 4.42%. Still, Treasuries turned lower in the wake of the
announcement. The benchmark 10-year Note finished roughly 14 ticks lower, but
the 30-year Bond dropped more than one full point. Their yields stand at 3.49%
and 4.49%, respectively.
Stocks came under a bit of
pressure following the midday announcement, but the move was contained as
buyers continued to provide support.
Shares of retailers (+1.5%)
were among the best performers; that helped the consumer discretionary sector
post a 1.4% gain, which was the best of any major sector.
Health care stocks were close
behind with an impressive 1.2% gain, which came even though Eli Lilly (LLY
35.02, -1.54) showed considerable weakness after it reaffirmed downside
guidance for fiscal 2009 and in-line guidance for fiscal 2010.
Participation had lacked for
most of the session, but a late surge in trading volume sent the number of
shares exchanged on the NYSE above 1 billion. Still, that level is well below
the 50-day moving average of 1.2 billion.
Advancing Sectors: Consumer Discretionary (+1.4%), Health
Care (+1.2%), Utilities (+1.2%), Energy (+0.9%), Telecom (+0.7%), Consumer
Staples (+0.5%), Industrials (+0.4%), Tech (+0.4%)
Declining Sectors: Materials (-0.3%), Financials (-0.2%)DJ30
+68.78 NASDAQ +7.13 NQ100 +0.5% R2K -0.4% SP400 +0.6% SP500 +6.40 NASDAQ
Adv/Vol/Dec 1040/1.96 bln/1640 NYSE Adv/Vol/Dec 1832/1.06 bln/1197