April 25, 2024

Markets Stay Strong, Riding Investor Confidence

Stocks rose on Wednesday, with the Dow and Standard Poor’s 500-stock index rising to new highs in a broad market rally.

The Nasdaq also reached its highest point since November 2000, though gains were limited by a steep decline in Apple. Shares of the technology giant sold off in late afternoon trading after filings from hedge funds showed that the one-time Wall Street darling had been dropped by more hedge fund managers in the first quarter.

But shares of Apple’s rival, Google, rose to a record high at $916.38 on news that it had adopted a business model for streaming music.

The day’s gains were broad, with nine of the S. P. 500’s 10 sectors ending higher. Among the top gainers were the consumer staples sector index, up 1 percent, and the financial sector, also up 1 percent. The only decliner was the energy sector index, down 0.4 percent.

The overall market showed further signs of strength as the S. P. 500-stock index reached a high for the fourth session in a row. The broad index has recorded 15 nominal closing highs this year.

The Dow Jones industrial average rose 60.44 points, or 0.40 percent, to 15,275.69 at the close on Wednesday. The S. P. 500-stock index added 8.44 points, or 0.51 percent, to finish at 1,658.78. The Nasdaq composite index gained 9.01 points, or 0.26 percent, to close at 3,471.62.

During trading, the Dow touched a record intraday high at 15,301.34, while the S. P. 500 reached a record intraday peak at 1,661.49. Earlier, the Nasdaq reached a 52-week high at 3,475.48.

In the latest assessments of the economy, activity in New York state’s manufacturing sector unexpectedly contracted in May. Another report showed that industrial production in the United States fell more than expected in April.

“It’s disconcerting that the data was so much lower than what we were looking for, but there’s no reason for investors to sell,” said Michael Binger, senior portfolio manager at Gradient Investments in Minneapolis.

“The main things driving the market — the Fed, earnings, consumer confidence — are holding up, and people put money in the market on any down day. I still see a lot of value,” he said.

In signs that the rally may strengthen from current levels, the Credit Suisse Fear Barometer, known as the CSFB Index, fell 11.4 points over the last two weeks — the largest decline on record — and was now at a one-year low of 21.73.

“A low CSFB reading is a constructive signal for the market,” a Credit Suisse equity derivatives strategist, Mandy Xu, wrote in a note to clients.

Among Wednesday’s top gainers was Agilent Tech, up 3.9 percent to $45.68, a day after the company posted adjusted earnings that beat expectations and doubled its stock buyback program to $1 billion.

Tech shares got a lift from Netflix, up 4 percent at $243.40, and from Yahoo, up 2.6 percent at $27.34. In contrast, the Computer Sciences Corporation was the S. P. 500’s biggest loser, dropping 9.7 percent to $44.71 after reporting results.

Shares of Bristol-Myers Squibb rose 5.1 percent to $44.34 in anticipation of favorable data from clinical trials of its melanoma drug.

In other data released on Wednesday, the producer price index recorded its largest drop in three years in April, falling a seasonally adjusted 0.7 percent.

The price of the benchmark 10-year Treasury note rose 12/32 to 98 9/32, dropping the yield to 1.94 from 1.98 on Tuesday.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/05/16/business/daily-stock-market-activity.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Gas Resumes Flowing From Eni’s Libya Plant

Eni said it might take several more days to reopen the pipeline, which is the single transmission conduit for Libyan natural gas to Italy and, from there, elsewhere in Europe.

While company executives said the supply impact would be minimal, given Eni’s stored reserves in Italy and other sources of gas, analysts said the turmoil had amplified concerns about the stability of energy production and distribution in North Africa. Energy markets and investors are still nervous after the murderous assault in January by militants on an Algerian gas field run by BP and Statoil of Norway.

“The episode is yet another example of energy firms’ operations in North Africa being disrupted by security problems,” IHS, an energy research firm in London, said Monday in a report. “The collective impact of these disturbances is to further discourage foreign direct investment into the energy sector.”

On Saturday, as fighting between rival Libyan militias became too close for comfort, Eni, the biggest foreign oil and gas player in Libya, shut down its giant Mellitah gas complex on the coast west of Tripoli and evacuated most of its personnel.

The Mellitah complex, which Eni built for an estimated €9 billion, or $12 billion, and opened in 2004, gathers and processes gas from fields in western Libya and then sends it through the Greenstream pipeline, which runs under the Mediterranean and comes ashore in Gela, Sicily.

The gas business is a joint venture with the Libyan national oil company.

Although Greenstream provides about 12 percent of Italy’s gas, Italian consumers are unlikely to notice the temporary shutdown, said Kash Burchett, an analyst at IHS. The stagnant Italian economy has sharply reduced demand for gas; Italy has about one month’s worth of gas in storage; and several other pipelines deliver the fuel from other sources, including Algeria and elsewhere in Europe.

But the shutdown could further set back the troubled economies of Libya and its North Africa neighbors, while dimming prospects for new investment in the region by international oil and gas companies.

Since the fall of Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi in 2011, Libya has been in a state of chaos as rival militias vie for turf and treasure. But until now the armed groups have left Libya’s oil and gas fields alone — or in Eni’s case, have even carefully protected the operations, which keep the country’s lights on and the money flowing in.

“The energy installations have been left out of the instability because there is wide recognition about as to how important they are to the economy,” said Richard Cochrane, a security analyst at IHS.

Why the militias crossed a line this past weekend is not entirely clear. One theory, not denied by Eni, is that the two militias were fighting for the privilege of guarding Libya’s most important oil and gas installation, as well as the economic and political benefits that accrue to whoever has that status.

“Libya is different from Algeria; there is not yet a capacity on the part of the central government to provide security,” said David L. Goldwyn, a former senior energy envoy for the U.S. State Department. As a result, he said, “companies are obliged to secure local security.”

The inability of the Tripoli government to provide security means “the investment climate in Libya has been challenged for some time,” said Mr. Goldwyn, who now heads Global Strategies, a consulting firm in Washington. “You are seeing companies protect existing investments in Libya, but being much more cautious in respect to large-scale” new commitments, he said.

Foreign energy companies with existing operations in North Africa might be hard to uproot. But countries including Libya, Algeria and even Egypt, whose economies depend on the oil and gas industry, are going to have trouble attracting new investments.

In a research note published Monday, Fadel Gheit, an analyst at Oppenheimer, argues that Houston-based Apache, which has built a big, highly profitable oil business in Egypt, would be better off decamping from the land along the Nile where it now obtains 28 percent of its petroleum.

“We are more pessimistic about Egypt’s future than in any time in the last two years,” Mr. Gheit wrote. We think Apache “would be better off exiting Egypt by selling its operations and using the proceeds to buy back shares, reduce debt and boost investments elsewhere.”

Apache declined to comment.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/05/business/energy-environment/05iht-gas05.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Stocks Off Slightly in Sixth Straight Decline

The Dow Jones industrial average dropped 21.87 points, or 0.18 percent, to 12,048.94, while the Standard Poor’s 500-stock index lost 5.38 points, or 0.42 percent, to 1,279.56. The Nasdaq composite index fell 26.18 points, or 0.97 percent, to 2,675.38.

The S. P. was off about 5.7 percent from its 2011 intraday high hit on May 2. Stocks have come under pressure recently because of several weak economic reports, especially the labor market.

The weakness was highlighted by Mr. Bernanke’s comments late Tuesday. He acknowledged that the recovery has slowed, but offered no hint that the Fed was considering any more stimulus to accelerate growth.

“Investors are repricing the slowdown after Bernanke crystallized it,” said Jason L. Ware, senior equity research and trading analyst at the Albion Financial Group in Salt Lake City. “The market was hoping for an indication that there may be another round of stimulus, but clearly that’s not what they got.”

The Fed’s $600 billion second round of stimulus, expected to end this month, had been a catalyst for the stock market’s advance.

Stocks in the health care and utility sectors rose, but financials and technology, sectors closely related to growth, kept up their losing streak.

“I think 1,250 is a key level and, if we get there, likely to provide support for the market, barring any further erosion in the underlying economic data,” Mr. Ware said, referring to the S. P. 500.

There were also signs of weakness from corporate America. Ciena, the communications networking equipment provider, forecast third-quarter revenue below expectations, driving down its stock and others in the sector.

Ciena fell 16.2 percent, to $20.29, while JDS Uniphase dropped 5.5 percent, to $17.40.

Limiting losses, the energy sector rose after talks at OPEC in Vienna broke down without an agreement on a production increase. The S. P. 500 energy index rose 0.5 percent, and Exxon Mobil, which said it discovered two vast oil reserves in the Gulf of Mexico, was up nearly 1 percent at $80.76.

Crude oil futures rose 1.7 percent to settle above $100 a barrel, at $100.74.

The Treasury’s 10-year note rose 14/32, to 101 17/32. The yield fell to 2.95 percent, from 2.99 percent late Tuesday.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=195cb86ecd1f2fd41589d803e8722949