May 3, 2024

Wall Street Rebounds

Stocks on Wall Street rose Tuesday, bouncing back after their worst decline since early November, following solid earnings from Coca-Cola and Johnson Johnson, and inflation data that reinforced expectations that the Federal Reserve would keep its stimulus in place.

The price of gold gained 2.2 percent after Monday’s 9 percent drop, its biggest daily fall in dollar terms. But even as gold buyers seized on the lower prices, investors in precious metals remained jittery about further declines.

In afternoon trading the Standard Poor’s 500-share index climbed 1.1 percent, and the Dow Jones industrial average gained 0.9 percent. The Nasdaq composite rose 1.2 percent.

Shares of Coca-Cola, up more than 5 percent and at their highest since 1998, and Johnson Johnson, at a new high, led the Dow industrials after reporting earnings that pleasantly surprised Wall Street.

Coca-Cola gained 5.3 percent after it posted slightly higher-than-expected profit and announced a deal to unload some distribution territory to five independent United States bottlers.

The stock of Johnson Johnson, a fellow Dow component, touched a record high of $83.50, up 2 percent, after the company reported better-than-expected first-quarter earnings.

International Paper and Vulcan Materials were among the top performers after bullish analyst notes.

Stocks on Monday posted their worst day since Nov. 7, as big declines in the price of gold, oil and other commodities fed a broad sell-off in equities. Stocks fell further after two fatal explosions near the finish of the Boston Marathon

Further supporting equities, data on Tuesday showed that the Consumer Price Index fell in March for the first time in four months, giving the Federal Reserve room to maintain its monetary stimulus to speed up economic growth.

“Dovish economic data is not good in the long run, but it is certainly supportive of more Fed action,” said Art Hogan, managing director at Lazard Capital Markets in New York.

He said earnings from safety plays like Coca-Cola and Johnson Johnson are going to determine if the market enters a correction phase that many are expecting — or if it finds more buyers looking for yield.

Other government data released on Tuesday showed industrial production grew 0.4 percent last month, topping expectations for a gain of 0.2 percent, while capacity utilization edged up to 78.5 percent in March from 78.3 percent in February.

Also, the Commerce Department reported an increase in the pace of home construction: housing starts rose 7 percent in March, reaching the seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.04 million houses, exceeding the 1 million mark for the first time since June 2008.

BlackRock, the asset management firm, said revived interest in the stock market led to a 10 percent in profit in the first quarter. BlackRock shares rose 0.8 percent.

Goldman Sachs reported a stronger-than-expected rise in quarterly profit as it earned more from underwriting fees and its own investments, but shares fell 1.8 percent.

The retailer Target shed 0.6 percent after it warned first-quarter earnings would miss expectations after weaker-than-expected sales of seasonal and other items.

Intel and Yahoo are scheduled to post earnings after the close.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/04/17/business/daily-stock-market-activity.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Wall Street and Gold Extend Declines

The prices of stocks and gold appeared to chase each other lower on Monday after a report said growth unexpectedly slowed in China.

The stall in the rise of the world’s second-largest economy pushed Wall Street’s major stock indexes down more than 1 percent in afternoon trading, and put heavy selling pressure on gold, oil and other commodities.

The price of gold, which has been steadily drifting lower since the worst of the Great Recession passed, dropped another 9 percent Monday after a 5 percent drop on Friday. By afternoon, the market price of an ounce of gold was at a multi-year low, $1,370.80.

Stocks, too, were continuing a pullback that began Friday after a report on falling retail sales for March. The Standard Poor’s 500-stock index slipped 1.4 percent in afternoon trading, while the Dow Jones industrial average fell 1 percent and the Nasdaq composite index lost 1.6 percent. The Dow had been off more than 200 points earlier.

“None of the economic data has been very good for the last couple of weeks,” said Paul Mendelsohn, chief investment strategist at Windham Financial Services in Charlotte, Vt., told Reuters. “I wouldn’t say this is over yet, but there are enough indicators out there to really indicate that investors should approach this market with a degree of caution which doesn’t seem to exist right now.”

China’s economy expanded 7.7 percent in the first quarter, according to a government report. While that would be far above most industrial economies, it fell well short of forecasts for an increase of 8 percent and slowed from 7.9 percent during the final quarter of 2012.

Analysts described the data variously as “a big disappointment” and a “truckload of unpleasant surprises.” The Chinese economy finally began to pick up steam toward the end of last year. The data released Monday, however, suggested that the gradual recovery was proving more fragile than most analysts had expected.

Other preciious metals were hit by heavy selling: Silver fell to its lowest since October 2010, platinum to its weakest since August and palladium to a three-month low. And crude oil was off 1.8 percent in New York trading to $89.69 after a 2 percent drop Friday.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/04/16/business/daily-stock-market-activity.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Stocks Pull Ahead

The stock market advanced on Tuesday as earnings season got under way, with the Dow Jones industrial average closing at another nominal record high on a rally in cyclical shares.

With the day’s advance, the Standard Poor’s 500-stock index ended less than two points shy of its nominal record, recovering from steep losses last week.

The strength in the indexes indicates that investors are again using market declines as buying opportunities. The top sectors of the day, technology and energy, are groups that are closely tied to the pace of economic growth.

“It’s encouraging that we’re seeing cyclical sectors lead the rally,” said Joseph Tanious, global market strategist at J. P. Morgan Funds. “It’s a healthy sign — investors believe the market can continue to run higher.”

Among blue-chip technology stocks, Microsoft jumped $1.02, or 3.6 percent, to $29.61 as the Dow’s top percentage gainer. Intel shares shot up 66 cents, or 3.1 percent, to $21.75, and Hewlett-Packard rose 29 cents, or 1.3 percent, to $22.22.

The Dow industrials rose 59.98 points, or 0.41 percent, to close at 14,673.46. The S. P. 500 gained 5.54 points, or 0.35 percent, to 1,568.61. The Nasdaq composite index added 15.61 points, or 0.48 percent, to 3,237.86.

While only 5 percent of S. P. 500 companies have reported results so far, almost three-quarters of those have topped expectations, according to Thomson Reuters data. Still, profits are seen rising just 1.5 percent from the year-ago quarter, down from estimates in January for growth of 4.3 percent.

“Expectations have gotten managed down to the point where we could more easily see companies beat expectations, making it easier for us to pop,” said Kristen Scarpa, an investment strategist at Barclays.

Late Monday, Alcoa reported earnings that beat expectations, though revenue was below forecasts. Shares of Alcoa, which as part of the Dow is unofficially seen as setting the tone for the earnings season, closed flat on the day at $8.39.

First Solar, which surged $12.31, or 45.5 percent, to $39.35, was the S. P. 500’s top gainer by far after forecasting 2013 earnings and revenue well above expectations.

The news lifted the solar sector, with Yingli Green Energy climbing 39 cents, or 21.1 percent, to $2.24, and Trina Solar up 56 cents, or 14.6 percent, at $4.40.

Recent reports have shown that the American economy is growing at a slow pace. The March employment report on Friday showed job creation was less than half of what economists had expected. Analysts said, however, that the market has the momentum to push indexes higher, even with the Dow industrials up 12 percent so far this year and the S. P. 500 up 10 percent.

J. C. Penney was the S. P. 500’s largest percentage loser, tumbling $1.94, or 12.2 percent, to $13.93 after the department store’s board ousted Ron Johnson as chief executive and replaced him with his predecessor, Myron E. Ullman.

Shares of Herbalife fell $1.44, or 3.8 percent, to $36.95 after it said that KPMG had resigned as its independent accountant. One of KPMG’s senior partners in the firm’s Los Angeles office was accused of leaking secret information to a stock trader about Herbalife and the footwear company Skechers USA. The accounting firm said Monday night that it had fired the partner.

In the bond market, interest rates showed little change. The price of the Treasury’s 10-year note slipped 2/32, to 102 8/32, while its yield held steady at 1.75 percent.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/04/10/business/daily-stock-market-activity.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Stocks End Down After Jobs Report

Stocks fell on Friday, giving the Standard Poor’s 500-stock index its worst weekly performance of the year, after a weaker-than-expected report on American employment, the latest in a series of data to indicate economic growth may be losing momentum.

The S.P. 500 fell 0.4 percent by the end of trading, while the Dow Jones industrial average lost 0.3 percent and the Nasdaq composite index slipped 0.7 percent.

All three indexes had improved from a loss of about 1 percent earlier in the day after the jobs report. About 88,000 jobs were added in March, less than half the forecast of 200,000, though the unemployment rate dipped to 7.6 percent from 7.7 percent. The report follows similarly disappointing reads on the manufacturing and services sector, as well as other poor labor market data.

“The numbers were certainly disappointing, but it has only been a week of some bad data points,” said JJ Kinahan, Chicago-based chief derivatives strategist at TD Ameritrade. “We will have to see a steady continuation of this to say it is becoming a trend.”

F5 Networks was the S.P.’s biggest percentage loser, dropping nearly 20, a day after forecasting second-quarter earnings and revenue that were well below expectations.

Several of F5’s peers were also sharply lower, with Juniper Networks off 3.5 percent and Citrix Systems down 1.5 percent.

Airline stocks were hit after J.P. Morgan Securities cut its revenue expectations for United States airlines by 2 to 3 percent for 2013 and 2014 and said it expected monthly revenue per available seat mile to turn negative for some airlines, hurt by federal budget cutbacks.

Delta Airlines fell 2.3 percent and United Continental Holdings was off 1.2 percent.

The S.P. 500 was down about 1 percent for the week, only its third weekly loss this year It has gained about 9 percent this year without a significant pullback.

Equity market gains have been partly fueled by a bond-buying program by the Federal Reserve. Measures from central banks around the world have also helped, and on Thursday, Wall Street rose after the Bank of Japan announced aggressive policies to jump-start its economy.

Friday’s payroll report “should reinforce the Fed’s recent bond-buying activity, but that may not be enough to turn today’s bearish feelings in the markets,” said Todd Schoenberger, managing partner at LandColt Capital in New York.

Energy shares were pressured, as the group is closely tied to economic growth expectations. Crude oil fell for a third day, dropping 0.6 percent and extending its decline for the week to more than 5 percent. Chevron fell 0.7 percent.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/04/06/business/economy/daily-stock-market-activity.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Common Sense: History Suggests Stocks May Have Farther to Go

With both the Dow Jones industrial average and the Standard Poor’s 500-stock index hitting new highs this week, and the S. P. 500 having already gained 10 percent in the first quarter, a growing chorus of analysts and financial advisers are warning investors that it is too late to join the rally.

Their logic seems unassailable: if ideally the goal of investing is to buy low and sell high, stock investors would indisputably be buying high right now. That the market would continue at anywhere near its first-quarter pace — an annualized return of 40 percent — stretches credulity. And by historical norms, this bull market, which began in March 2009, is aging.

Of course, this is what experts almost always say when stocks rise to new highs. So I wondered, what would have happened to investors who bought stocks in the past only after stock indexes hit new highs?

To find out, I used the S. P. 500 index, and looked for those points where the index hit a new high at least one year after its previous high. (These points should not be confused with market peaks, which can be identified only in hindsight.) I used a one-year intervening decline because new highs get attention only when a substantial period of time has elapsed since the previous one.

By my count, there have been eight such new highs since the S. P. assumed its current form in 1957. I also looked at the high reached by the S. P.’s predecessor in 1954.

If investors had ignored the adage that the easy money had already been made and bought an index fund at those points, then held the investment for five and 10 years, how would they have fared?

In all but one instance — if investors had bought in October 2007 — they would have realized positive returns, not adjusted for inflation. Even in that case, when the S. P. 500 surpassed the previous high set in 2000, the five-year loss was modest. Of course, it is too soon to know what the 10-year result will be, but with the market’s recent new highs, the index has recouped all its losses.

In several cases over those years, the gains were spectacular, ranging from over 100 percent to 200 percent and more. The best returns would have been realized by investors who bought in mid-1989, when the S. P. 500 surpassed the high previously set in October 1987, before the crash that year. By 1999, investors had nearly quadrupled their money in one of the market’s greatest bull runs.

(Of course, they were headed for a crash in 2000. Even though the market reached a peak that year, by my definition there was no new milestone high because the index had not traded below its October 1987 high for a year or more.)

It seems that buying high — or at least at new highs — may not be such a bad strategy after all.

Several experts I consulted this week suggested the result may not be as surprising as it seems.

Richard Sylla, a professor of the history of financial institutions and markets at New York University, pointed out that anyone who bought stocks early in the great bull markets beginning in the mid-1950s and in 1982 experienced outsize returns, even if they bought at new market highs. By contrast, if they bought at new highs reached in mid-1967 or 1972, returns were tepid, even negative when adjusted for inflation.

“The long periods between new highs — 1929 to 1954, 1968 to 1982, and 2000 to 2007 — were periods marked by both bad economic policies and wars,” Professor Sylla said. “The periods of steady advance — 1954 to 1968 and 1982 to 2000 — featured better economic policies and minor wars. Right now, it seems to me that economic policies are improving, as is the economy as we put the financial crisis behind us, and we are getting out of wars instead of into them, knock on wood. That could indicate that we are in the early stages of a period that might resemble 1954 to 1968 or 1982 to 2000. So the recent new highs could well be a signal that it’s a good time to invest in equities.”

Jeremy J. Siegel, a finance professor at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania and author of the classic “Stocks for the Long Run,” said he agreed that “the data doesn’t bear out that just because the market has hit a new all-time high, it’s too late to buy stocks.”

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/04/06/business/history-suggests-stocks-may-have-farther-to-go.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Stocks Fall After Disappointing Data

Stocks on Wall Street ended moderately lower on Wednesday after weak readings on service-sector growth and private-sector employment.

The Standard Poor’s 500-stock index closed down 1.1 percent, the Dow Jones industrial average was 0.8 percent lower, and the Nasdaq composite index slid 1.1 percent. The S.P. 500 had been near its record level of 1,576.09 points for the last several sessions.

Investors had expected market movements to be modest ahead of the release on Friday of the closely watched nonfarm payrolls report for March, with few major trading catalysts before then.

But stocks continued to fall through the day. The latest ADP National Employment Report showed 158,000 private sector jobs were added in March, and the Institute for Supply Management said its services index fell to 54.4 last month.

“People aren’t worried about employment compared to the overall macro outlook, and they have a general idea that the economy is improving,” said Wayne Kaufman, chief market analyst at John Thomas Financial in New York. “That should allow us to hold firm.”

While data has largely been positive and helped to propel the equity market in the first quarter, a few disappointments have made investors cautious. “Some data has indicated softening, but things should remain quiet until Friday,” Mr. Kaufman said.

In company news, Zynga surged 9 percent said it would begin offering poker and casino-style games in Britain in partnership with Bwin. party Digital Entertainment.

ConAgra Foods fell 0.7 percent. The company reported third-quarter earnings that fell 57 percent even as revenue grew.

Monsanto rose 1.6 percent after reporting earnings that beat expectations and raising its full-year profit forecast.

Verizon Communications ruled out a full takeover of Vodafone, turning the focus yet again to whether the two telecommunication giants can do a deal over their Verizon Wireless joint venture. New York-listed shares of Vodafone fell 2.9 percent, while Verizon was off 0.4 percent.

Issues in the euro zone will continue to be in focus a day after Cyprus concluded a bailout deal. The plan, which still requires ratification, would mean the country receives a 10 billion euro loan, and that it has until 2018 to carry out measures to shore up its finances. The country’s finance minister resigned after concluding the deal.

While investors have tended to use any market decline as a buying opportunity, the situation in Cyprus has been a major source of market uncertainty in recent weeks. European markets were flat to slightly lower in afternoon trading Wednesday.

Wall Street stocks rose on Tuesday, lifted by health care stocks, after a government decision on payment rates. Strong factory orders data also added to the positive tone.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/04/04/business/economy/daily-stock-market-activity.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Shares Fall on Cyprus Fears and Oracle’s Weak Sales

The stock market fell on Thursday after Oracle’s weak sales results weighed down big technology companies. Traders also worried that Cyprus was running out of time to avoid a collapse of its financial system.

The American market followed its European counterparts lower at the open and remained solidly negative all day. The Dow Jones industrial average fell as much as 129 points by midafternoon before paring the loss to close down 90 points.

All three major indexes felt the drag from technology stocks after Oracle reported an unexpected decline in sales in its fiscal third quarter. Oracle’s results have an outsize impact on other technology stocks because it reports earlier than most of its peers.

European markets closed sharply lower. The main indexes in Paris and Frankfurt fell 1.4 percent and 0.9 percent on fears that the crisis in Cyprus would intensify. The European Central Bank has threatened to end emergency support of the nation’s banks next week unless leaders can secure more financing.

Cyprus must raise about $7.5 billion in the next four days to avoid bankruptcy. Several plans have failed, including a proposal to tax deposits held by the nation’s banks. If Cyprus is unable to secure a bailout, its banks will fail and it could be forced to leave the euro currency. Worries about that possibility first hit stock markets Monday.

“It’s amazing how quickly things can turn back to Cyprus and Europe,” said Oliver Cross, director of research with Carolinas Investment Consulting.

Oracle was the biggest decliner in the Standard Poor’s 500-stock index, falling $3.47, or 9.7 percent, to $32.30. The S. P. 500-stock index lost 12.91 points, or 0.8 percent, to 1,545.80.

The Dow Jones industrial average dropped 90.24 points, or 0.6 percent, to 14,421.49. Cisco Systems was the Dow’s biggest loser, dropping 83 cents, or 3.8 percent, to $20.84.

The Nasdaq composite index, which is weighted heavily toward technology stocks, fell 31.59 points, or 1 percent, to 3,222.60.

Despite being down for the week, the Dow remains near a record high. Its run-up has been powered by optimism about the United States economy and the Federal Reserve’s easy-money policies. The Dow is up 2.6 percent this month. The S. P. 500 has gained 2.1 percent in March.

Given the market’s recent strength, many analysts have been anticipating a decline at the first sign of bad news — whether from Europe, corporate America or the American economy.

A sharp sell-off, however, has not materialized, said Troy Logan, managing director and senior economist at Warren Financial Service. He said Thursday’s losses could have been much worse.

“We thought Cyprus would be the perfect opportunity for the market to step back, but it looks like the market has shrugged it off,” Mr. Logan said.

The job and housing markets continue to improve gradually, according to economic reports released Thursday. The Labor Department said the number of people claiming new unemployment benefits last week was about flat near a five-year low. Sales of used homes rose in February to a three-year high, according to the National Association of Realtors.

Among the stocks on the move, AstraZeneca rose after saying it would cut 2,300 more jobs worldwide and overhaul its research operations. That brings to 11,000 the number of job cuts announced in the last 13 months. Its shares rose $1.77, or 3.8 percent, to $47.95.

The Movado Group fell after the luxury watchmaker said its fiscal fourth-quarter net income fell 26 percent. Its stock dropped $3.89, or 10.5 percent, to $33.23.

In the bond market, the price of the Treasury’s 10-year note rose 13/32, to 100 25/32, while its yield dropped to 1.91 percent, from 1.96 percent late Wednesday.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/22/business/daily-stock-market-activity.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Market Falls on Fear Cyprus Deal Could Hurt Euro

The stock market lost ground Monday as investors worried that a proposal to seize money from bank depositors in Cyprus could cause more anxiety over the fate of the euro, Europe’s shared currency.

The Dow Jones industrial average fell 62.05 points, or 0.4 percent, to close at 14,452.06 Monday. It plunged as much as 110 points early, briefly turned positive in the afternoon, then fell again in the last hour of trading.

The Standard Poor’s 500-stock index fell 8.60 points, or 0.6 percent, to 1,552.10, moving further from its high of 1,565.15, set in 2007. The Nasdaq composite index dropped 11.48 points, or 0.4 percent, to 3,237.59.

European markets recovered most of an early decline and closed with modest losses. Yields on government bonds issued by Spain and Italy edged up, and the euro fell to a three-month low against the dollar.

The market rally that has pushed the Dow to record levels this year has been punctuated by concerns about the euro zone’s lingering debt crisis.

“Europe has got problems,” said Uri Landesman, president of the hedge fund Platinum Partners. “You could get more stuff like this, and the market isn’t priced to handle that.”

Cyprus reached an agreement last weekend with its European partners for its government to raid bank accounts as part of a 15.8 billion-euro ($20.7 billion) financial bailout, the first time in the euro zone crisis that the prospect of seizing individuals’ savings has been raised. The measures are stoking fears of bank runs in the other 16 nations that use the euro.

Cypriot authorities, facing an uproar, delayed a parliamentary vote on the seizure and ordered the country’s banks to remain closed until Thursday while they try to modify the deal to lessen its impact on small depositors.

Markets in Europe and Asia also fell during early trading, before retracing some of their losses later in the day. Germany’s DAX index dropped 0.4 percent and Spain’s main stock index shed 1.3 percent. Indexes in Britain and France each lost 0.5 percent.

The American stock market’s reaction to euro zone developments has eased over time.

The Dow slumped more than 8 percent last year from May 1 to June 1 on concerns that Spain and Italy would be dragged into Europe’s debt crisis. While the Dow initially dropped last month in reaction to the unsettled Italian election results, which threw the country into political paralysis, it has since gained 4.6 percent. Likewise the market recovered much of the early loss on Monday prompted by the Cyprus bailout deal.

Even with the stock market’s pullback Friday and Monday, the Dow is still up 10.3 percent this year, while the S. P. 500 is up 8.8 percent.

The stock market’s resilience suggests that traders consider the Cyprus situation to be contained for now, said Quincy Krosby, a market strategist for Prudential. The threat of rising volatility may also deter the Fed from thinking about ending its economic stimulus program. The central bank starts its second two-day policy meeting of the year Tuesday. “Absent the Cyprus flare-up, the markets were slowing a bit and it looked as if investors were digesting the gains and waiting for the next catalyst,” Ms. Krosby said.

In the bond market in the United States, interest rates slipped. The price of the Treasury’s 10-year note rose 10/32, to 100 13/32, while its yield fell to 1.96 percent from 1.99 percent as investors moved into low-risk investments.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/19/business/daily-stock-market-activity.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Market Rally Continues, Though Volume Is Light

The stock market rose modestly on Monday, lifting the Dow Jones industrial average to its fifth straight nominal record high and giving the Standard Poor’s 500-stock index its seventh straight advance.

The gains put the S. P. 500 just nine points away from its record closing high, which it reached in October 2007.

Stocks have rallied strongly since the start of the year, helped by signs of improvement in the economy and the Federal Reserve’s continuing program of quantitative easing to stimulate the economy. These factors have limited recent pullbacks as investors have used them as buying opportunities.

“These dips are consistently bought. There is definitely a soft floor for the market,” said Peter Kenny, managing director at Knight Capital in Jersey City.

“It’s a Q.E. bid,” Mr. Kenny said, referring to the Fed’s policy of keeping short-term interest rates near zero since late 2008. “Quite frankly, earnings have not disappointed to the point where it has been disrupted, and there is nothing out there that seems to be getting in the way of this slow but very consistent and methodical drift higher in the market.”

Trading volume was relatively light, however, suggesting the rally may be losing steam.

So far this year, the Dow has gained more than 10 percent, while the S. P. 500 is up more than 9 percent.

On Monday, the Dow industrials gained 50.22 points, or 0.4 percent, to close at 14,447.29. The S. P. 500 index rose 5.04 points, or 0.3 percent, to 1,556.22, just nine points shy of its record closing high of 1,565.15, which it reached on Oct. 9, 2007.

The Nasdaq composite index added 8.51 points, or 0.3 percent, to 3,252.87. The Nasdaq is still well below its record high of more than 5,000, reached during the dot-com boom in 2000.

Wall Street’s “fear gauge,” the CBOE Volatility Index, declined to its lowest level since February 2007, suggesting investors were not unnerved by a brief pullback in Monday’s early trading, despite expectations by many investors that a correction might be looming. The index, known as the VIX, dropped 8.2 percent to 11.56.

Boeing helped lead the Dow higher, gaining $1.71, or 2.1 percent, to $82.94, after the aircraft manufacturer said strong demand was prompting it to increase its production rates of commercial planes.

Among the stocks on the move, BlackBerry surged $1.84, or 14.1 percent, to $14.90 after ATT said it would start selling the company’s new BlackBerry Z10 touch-screen smartphone in the United States on March 22.

Dell gained 21 cents, or 1.5 percent, to $14.37 after the computer maker agreed to give the activist investor Carl C. Icahn a closer look at its books less than a week after Mr. Icahn joined the growing opposition to Michael Dell’s plan to take private the company he founded. Dell’s shares are now trading well above the offer price of $13.65 to take the company private, indicating that investors expect a higher offer.

Genworth Financial, the mortgage and health care insurer, jumped 66 cents, or 6.7 percent, to $10.50. An article in Barron’s predicted Genworth stock could almost double in the next year, bolstered by gains in the mortgage and health care markets.

In contrast, Dick’s Sporting Goods tumbled $5.49, or 10.8 percent, to $45.11 after the retailer reported fourth-quarter results that were lower than expected and gave a disappointing forecast.

In the bond market, interest rates edged up slightly. The price of the Treasury’s 10-year note slid 3/32, to 99 15/32, while its yield rose to 2.06 percent, from 2.05 percent late Friday.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/12/business/economy/daily-stock-market-activity.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Wall Street Now Banks On Rebound in Employment

Less than a week since the Dow Jones industrial average hit its all-time high, the broader Standard Poor’s 500-stock index is on track to surpass its own 2007 high. The reason, in no small part, is because of investor confidence in the growing economic strength of American households.

This is a shift from the last few years, when stocks and corporate profits soared primarily because of cost-cutting and increased productivity from a shrinking or slow-growing work force. The Federal Reserve’s stimulus programs helped corporate America, but they did little to help improve the lives of most American workers, whose wages declined while unemployment remained stuck at high levels.

A surprisingly good employment report on Friday was the strongest of a number of recent indicators that the benefits of the Fed’s program are now starting to trickle down to ordinary Americans, who should, in turn, push up sales at American companies. In addition to brisk job growth in recent months, the February employment report gave some of the first evidence of a sustained upturn in wages, and showed that it was spread across many industries.

The improving job market could falter, particularly if cutbacks in government spending mandated by the so-called sequester take a substantial bite out of economic growth. But even a more modest upturn comes not a moment too soon for American companies.

Growth in corporate profits has slowed in recent quarters as the earlier gains from productivity and cost-cutting reached their limits. Many strategists are now seeing signs that the slowdown in expense reduction — the so-called bottom line — is being made up for by top-line growth in revenues from reviving American consumers.

“You can only cut and cut and cut for so long, eventually you have to have growth,” said Paul Hickey, a founder of the Bespoke Investment Group. “Now we’re starting to see some signs that is happening.”

In the fourth quarter, American companies experienced the biggest increase in sales per share of any quarter since the financial crisis, according to figures from RBS Securities. In announcing their most recent financial results, many executives spoke about the boost they have gotten from American customers, and the money they are putting back into the pockets of their own employees.

Daniel S. Fulton, the chief executive of Weyerhaeuser Company, a timber company, told investors in January, “Most of the hiring that we have done in the company has been production employees that we’ve been putting back to work, in order to be able to ramp up and respond to the increased opportunities for wood products.” The improving prospects for corporate revenues are encouragement to hesitant investors who have been wondering whether to get back into the stock market but worried that the current rally could already be reaching its peak. After six straight days of gains, the S. P. 500 closed Friday just 14 points, or 0.9 percent, from the record high of 1,565.15 it hit in October 2007. Factoring in inflation, however, the index is still far from earlier peaks, as is the Dow.

The sequestration’s automatic spending cuts have not yet appeared in economic data and there are fears it could exert a future drag on the economic recovery. But Friday’s employment report — showing a gain of 236,000 jobs and a dip in the jobless rate to 7.7 percent — suggested that American businesses have largely shrugged off the 2 percentage point increase in the payroll tax that was expected to inflict more pain.

Even if corporate revenues climb further, it won’t necessarily lead to rising share prices. Investors have already factored the optimistic economic signs while making their investments.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/11/business/economy/after-corporate-upswing-hopes-grow-for-a-consumer-revival.html?partner=rss&emc=rss