November 22, 2024

Stocks & Bonds: Shares Soar on Talk of a Europe Deal

The surge in equities ended a seven-day losing streak for the Standard Poor’s 500-stock index, pushing it nearly 3 percent higher. It was a welcome change of direction from last week, when Wall Street lost more than 4 percent as markets reacted to rising borrowing costs for European governments and the failure by a Congressional committee in Washington to reach an accord on ways to cut the budget deficit.

On Monday, traders reacted to the news that Germany and France have been discussing a deal to hasten European budget and financial coordination. Analysts said a deal that did not require renegotiating European Union treaties could reassure markets and bring skeptics on board to support the euro.

 “We are seeing slightly better news out of Europe,” said Kate Warne, an investment strategist for Edward Jones. With last week’s oversold conditions, she added, “not surprisingly, there are a lot of attractive opportunities.”

The Dow Jones industrial average rose 2.59 percent, or 291.23 points, to 11,523.01. The S. P. 500 jumped 2.92 percent, or 33.88 points, to 1,192.55, and the Nasdaq composite index was up 3.52 percent, or 85.83 points, to 2,527.34.

There were reasons to be guarded about the significance of one day of gains, however. Monday’s surge had not pushed any of the major indexes into positive territory for the month or year.

It could also be another sign of rising market volatility. The S. P. 500, for example, has closed up at least 4 percent in one day eight times since the beginning of 2009, as the financial crisis set in, while it has fallen by 4 percent or more 10 times in that period.

Howard Silverblatt, senior index analyst for Standard Poor’s, said a high proportion of the index’s big swings had, in fact, occurred just since 2009: of 164 times the index had moved by at least 4 percent since 1962, 26 had been in the last three years.

In Europe, the Euro Stoxx 50 index, a barometer of euro zone blue chips, rose 5.73 percent. The CAC 40 in Paris was up 5.46 percent, and the DAX, the German index, rose 4.6 percent. The FTSE 100 index in London gained 2.87 percent. The euro rose to $1.3308, from $1.3239 late Friday in New York.

In the bond market, the 10-year note fell 1/32, to 100 9/32, and the yield remained at 1.97. The comparable German bond rose 4 basis points, to yield 2.29 percent.

Bonds of countries that have been seen as more risky rose in price. Italian 10-year bonds traded to yield 7.191 percent, down four basis points. Spanish 10-year bonds were down 13 basis points at 6.50 percent.

“Talk that European countries were discussing bilateral treaties to strengthen fiscal ties across the current monetary union seems to be easing tensions somewhat this morning, and driving a sizable sell-off in the U.S. rates markets,” Guy LeBas, the chief fixed-income strategist for Janney Montgomery Scott, wrote in a research note.

Investors seemed to shrug off dire warnings from the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development and Moody’s Investors Service, both of which warned that the euro zone problems were well on their way to becoming serious issues for noneuro countries.

Markets also took a measure of optimism from the National Retail Federation, which said on Sunday that spending in the United States during the Thanksgiving weekend surged 9.1 percent over last year — the biggest increase since 2006 — to an average of almost $400 per shopper. On Wall Street, consumer stocks were up about 3 percent, while energy stocks were up more than 3.5 percent as oil prices rose.

United States Steel rose 8.49 percent, or $1.89, to $24.16, as the materials sector over all rose 3.6 percent.

Marathon Oil was up 5.35 percent at $25.98, and consumer shares were helped by Netflix, which jumped 9.54 percent, to $69.95.

Commercial Metals Company pushed 23.76 percent higher, to $14.17, after Carl C. Icahn offered to acquire the company, a recycler based in Irving, Tex., for $15 a share.

David Jolly contributed reporting.

This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:

Correction: November 28, 2011

An earlier version of this article misstated the recent yield for the United States 10-year Treasury bond.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/29/business/global/daily-stock-market-activity.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Strategies: In Europe’s Crisis, 17 Moving Parts

Finland?

For all its virtues, that small Nordic country hasn’t grabbed much global attention lately. But thanks to the quirky political and economic structure of Europe, last week Finland had the power to send financial markets into a tailspin.

As it turned out, the Finns didn’t throw a wrench into the financial gears. But that they were in a position to do so provided yet another reason for shaken investors to hide in the nearest bunker.

How did it come to this?

The euro zone has been a source of global instability for months. In the latest episode, Finland, which has an impeccable credit rating, was asked to approve a measure that would aid its improvident southern neighbor, Greece. The Finnish Parliament had grave reservations — it is already contemplating writing off some of its direct loans to Greece. But mindful of the possible consequences, the Finns voted to strengthen a European bailout fund, the inelegantly named European Financial Stability Facility.

That got world markets through Wednesday, but it hardly ended the European financial crisis — even this phase of it. The next day, it was Germany’s turn. After weeks of fierce debate, Parliament passed the measure in a 523-to-85 vote. On Friday, Austria gave its approval. And between now and Oct. 11, Cyprus, Estonia, Malta, the Netherlands and Slovakia will all have their say.

After that, if all 17 euro zone countries have granted approval, the newly empowered 440 billion euro fund (about $600 billion) will be available to give Greece some succor.

“There are a lot of moving parts and a lot could go wrong,” said David J. Kostin, the chief United States investment strategist for Goldman Sachs. “And these macro issues are dominating micro ones like whether a particular company in the S. P. is having a strong quarter — and many of them are.”

For months now, investors have been putting money in a traditional haven — the United States Treasury market, whose appeal has been burnished by the accommodative monetary policies of the Federal Reserve.

For stocks, though, a vicious circle has developed. The global economy is weak, and stocks worldwide have trended downward.

“The direction of the markets is being determined by geopolitical uncertainty on three continents,” Mr. Kostin said. China’s possible slowdown, the disappointing economy in the United States and the European financial crisis are all weighing on the markets, he said, with the European predicament likely to be front and center over the next several weeks.

In the case of the European Financial Stability Facility, political leaders and central bankers involved in the rescue effort already appeared to know it wouldn’t be enough to resolve the crisis. A vastly greater financial commitment is needed to prevent the crisis from spreading, many analysts say.

The European Central Bank may use some of the fund’s money as collateral for making larger loans, effectively “leveraging” the fund and giving it more firepower, but the bank’s powers are circumscribed. Any further fundamental changes must also be approved, one by one, by each country in the monetary union.

That is because the euro zone is not a fiscal union or a sovereign state, and its founders didn’t prepare for the eventuality that one of its members might be unable to pay its bills — threatening the stability of banks, countries and markets worldwide. Furthermore, as things stand, it’s not clear that the European Union is capable of achieving even the level of governance — some would call it dysfunction — that has lately characterized the United States. This helps explain why the European crisis has, if anything, been even harder to resolve than the still-simmering one on this side of the Atlantic, and why these linked crises are not about to disappear anytime soon.

On the American side, with unemployment at 9.1 percent and the economy growing at an anemic rate, Congress and the White House have been unable to agree on another fiscal stimulus plan — or even on whether further fiscal stimulus is wise. And a Congressional special panel must find $1.2 trillion in budget cuts in time for a Nov. 23 deadline, or else the government will make across-the-board cuts to achieve those savings.

For its part, the Fed has been engaging in monetary stimulus. Its latest foray into unorthodox policy making, known as Operation Twist, is explicitly aimed at lowering bond yields. Because prices and yields move in opposite directions, the Fed’s avowed policy is contributing to a long-running bond market rally.

That implies further problems for the stock market, Bank of America Merrill Lynch suggested in a research note last week. “There can be no bull market in equities in the medium term without a bear market in bonds,” the note said.

With the threat of another recession high, the stock market has been volatile and range-bound and is likely to stay that way until the bond market rally ends, said Michael Hartnett, chief global equity strategist at Bank of America Merrill Lynch. For that to happen, he said, it “would mean that Bernanke Company will win the war against deflation, which is obviously what they’ve been up to the last couple of years.” Such a victory “would go hand in hand with much better economic conditions,” he said, and demand for riskier assets like stocks would rise.

For now, though, uncertainty reigns, not only in Europe and the United States but also in the Chinese economy, where efforts to curb inflation may also be throttling growth. Still, Mr. Kostin said, the profit outlook remains strong among the global corporations that dominate the Standard Poor’s 500. He expects that the index will rise in the fourth quarter — closing modestly higher, at 1,250.

But in today’s global economy, many little things can easily go wrong. If they do, he said, investing in stocks, particularly in individual stocks, is likely to be very difficult.

“The macro story is dominant,” he said. And it hasn’t been a very upbeat story.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=54e0f3c0fcea1b7cbe57b3ce82a112ab

Stocks and Bonds: Markets Rise on Effort to Help Europe

The European Central Bank, the United States Federal Reserve and three other central banks said Thursday they would provide European banks with unlimited dollar loans. The aim is to fend off worries that the banks could be weakened by their holdings of government bonds from Greece and other struggling European countries.

“It’s a pretty powerful action,” said Brian Gendreau, senior investment strategist at the Cetera Financial Group. “And it’s another piece of news that leads you to think the crisis in Europe could be on the road to resolution.”

The Dow Jones industrial average rose 186.45 points, or 1.7 percent, to close at 11,433.18.

The Standard Poor’s 500-stock index rose 20.43 points, or 1.7 percent, to 1,209.11. The index has jumped 4.8 percent this week but is still 10 points short of where it started the month.

Gold plunged $45, or 2.5 percent, to settle at $1,778 an ounce. Treasury prices fell, pushing their yields up. The Treasury’s benchmark 10-year note fell 26/32, to 100 12/32, and the yield rose to 2.08 percent from 1.99 percent late Wednesday.

The Nasdaq rose 34.52 points, 1.34 percent, to 2,607.07. The index has jumped 5.6 percent so far this week and is up 1.1 percent in September. The Dow is down 1.6 percent this month, the S. P. 0.8 percent.

Daniel Alpert, managing partner at Westwood Capital in New York, said the stock market had been overreacting to Europe’s debt crisis, swinging in response to each new development.

“Every time there’s news out of Europe that’s not bad, the market reacts positively, and that’s occurring on almost a nightly basis,” he said. “You’d think the U.S. economy might be part of what the market trades on, but the fact of the matter is, today and recently, it’s all been about Europe.”

Bank stocks led the market higher. The Goldman Sachs Group rose 3 percent to $107.97. Bank of America rose 4 percent to $7.33. Morgan Stanley jumped 7 percent to $16.59 after reporting that its chairman, John J. Mack, would step down at the end of the year.

The stock market’s gains were tempered by a mixed batch of economic reports. First-time claims for unemployment benefits rose by 11,000 last week, to 428,000. The New York and Philadelphia branches of the Federal Reserve also reported weak manufacturing in their regions.

On the positive side, factory output rose 0.5 percent in August, after increasing 0.6 percent in July. Autos and related products increased 2.6 percent, evidence that supply chain disruptions stemming from the Japan earthquake continued to ease.

Among stocks making big moves, HCA Holdings, a hospital chain, rose 12 percent to $20.84 after it said it would buy back more than $1 billion of its stock from Bank of America.

Research in Motion fell sharply in after-hours trading after falling less than 1 percent and closing at $29.54 in regular trading. The maker of BlackBerry mobile devices reported earnings and sales that came in far below Wall Street’s estimates.

The Swiss bank UBS fell 10 percent to $11.41 on news that a trader could cost the bank as much as $2.2 billion. The bank warned that it could post a loss for the quarter as a result of the unauthorized trade.

Netflix fell almost 19 percent to $169.25, the biggest drop among stocks in the S. P. 500 index, after the company said it expected fewer people to subscribe to its DVD-by-mail service as well as its streaming movie service.

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Markets Rise on Effort to Help Europe

The European Central Bank, the United States Federal Reserve and three other central banks said Thursday they would provide European banks with unlimited dollar loans. The aim is to fend off worries that the banks could be weakened by their holdings of government bonds from Greece and other struggling European countries.

“It’s a pretty powerful action,” said Brian Gendreau, senior investment strategist at the Cetera Financial Group. “And it’s another piece of news that leads you to think the crisis in Europe could be on the road to resolution.”

The Dow Jones industrial average rose 186.45 points, or 1.7 percent, to close at 11,433.18.

The Standard Poor’s 500-stock index rose 20.43 points, or 1.7 percent, to 1,209.11. The index has jumped 4.8 percent this week but is still 10 points short of where it started the month.

Gold plunged $45, or 2.5 percent, to settle at $1,778 an ounce. Treasury prices fell, pushing their yields up. The Treasury’s benchmark 10-year note fell 26/32, to 100 12/32, and the yield rose to 2.08 percent from 1.99 percent late Wednesday.

The Nasdaq rose 34.52 points, 1.34 percent, to 2,607.07. The index has jumped 5.6 percent so far this week and is up 1.1 percent in September. The Dow is down 1.6 percent this month, the S. P. 0.8 percent.

Daniel Alpert, managing partner at Westwood Capital in New York, said the stock market had been overreacting to Europe’s debt crisis, swinging in response to each new development.

“Every time there’s news out of Europe that’s not bad, the market reacts positively, and that’s occurring on almost a nightly basis,” he said. “You’d think the U.S. economy might be part of what the market trades on, but the fact of the matter is, today and recently, it’s all been about Europe.”

Bank stocks led the market higher. The Goldman Sachs Group rose 3 percent to $107.97. Bank of America rose 4 percent to $7.33. Morgan Stanley jumped 7 percent to $16.59 after reporting that its chairman, John J. Mack, would step down at the end of the year.

The stock market’s gains were tempered by a mixed batch of economic reports. First-time claims for unemployment benefits rose by 11,000 last week, to 428,000. The New York and Philadelphia branches of the Federal Reserve also reported weak manufacturing in their regions.

On the positive side, factory output rose 0.5 percent in August, after increasing 0.6 percent in July. Autos and related products increased 2.6 percent, evidence that supply chain disruptions stemming from the Japan earthquake continued to ease.

Among stocks making big moves, HCA Holdings, a hospital chain, rose 12 percent to $20.84 after it said it would buy back more than $1 billion of its stock from Bank of America.

Research in Motion fell sharply in after-hours trading after falling less than 1 percent and closing at $29.54 in regular trading. The maker of BlackBerry mobile devices reported earnings and sales that came in far below Wall Street’s estimates.

The Swiss bank UBS fell 10 percent to $11.41 on news that a trader could cost the bank as much as $2.2 billion. The bank warned that it could post a loss for the quarter as a result of the unauthorized trade.

Netflix fell almost 19 percent to $169.25, the biggest drop among stocks in the S. P. 500 index, after the company said it expected fewer people to subscribe to its DVD-by-mail service as well as its streaming movie service.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=02812bdbc75367785a554681cdf8bf8f

Optimism Pushes Dow to Best Week in 2 Years

The rally started Monday after Nike reported strong quarterly results. Revenue that beat analysts’ predictions indicated that shoppers were still splurging on more expensive sneakers and sportswear, despite the recent run-up in gas prices. On Thursday, Greece cleared its final hurdle before it receives its next round of loans to avoid defaulting on its debt. The same day, a report showed that manufacturing in the Chicago region had picked up unexpectedly.

A report on Friday from the Institute for Supply Management showed that manufacturing across the country had expanded, reinforcing the growing perception that the slowdown was temporary. The Federal Reserve chairman, Ben S. Bernanke, and a number of prominent economists have argued that the economy will pick up again once the effects of the Japan disaster waned and high gas prices recede.

Many economists and analysts began lowering their estimates for growth in May after a string of negative reports on manufacturing, consumer spending and hiring by private companies. A shortage of computer chips and auto parts from Japan, higher gas prices and severe weather in the South all contributed to what appeared to be a slowdown in the economic recovery. Stocks lost most of their gains for the year by mid-June.

Todd Salamone, an investment strategist at Schaeffer’s Investment Research, said the recent surge in stocks represented an “unwinding of the tremendous negativity that built up over the past few weeks.”

The Dow Jones industrial average rose 168.43 points, or 1.36 percent, to 12,582.77, on Friday. The Standard and Poor’s 500-stock index gained 19.03 points, or 1.44 percent, to 1,339.67. The Nasdaq composite added 42.51 points, or 1.53 percent, to 2,816.03.

All 30 stocks in the Dow index rose Friday. Companies that do well during times of economic expansion led the index. Alcoa and Caterpillar each gained more than 2 percent.

It was the fourth time this week that the Dow gained more than 100 points. The Dow’s 648-point gain for the week is its largest since the bull market began in March 2009. It is up 8.68 percent for the year, about 2 percent below its April high. The S. P. is up 6.52 percent for the year. It had been up as high as 8.4 percent.

A rebound in automobile sales also helped send stock indexes higher on Friday. General Motors and Ford both said their sales rose 10 percent over this time last year. Car companies have been forced to slow the production of some models because of the shortage of parts after the earthquake and tsunami in Japan.

Honda and Toyota said recently that their North American production was beginning to return to normal. That has helped push the national manufacturing index higher. The Institute for Supply Management’s index rose to 55.3 in June from 53.5 the month before, on a scale in which a number above 50 indicates growth.

Among United States companies, the for-profit education company Apollo Group rose 6 percent despite a steep drop in student enrollment. The company’s profits fell, but not as much as analysts had predicted. Darden Restaurants, the parent company of Red Lobster and the Olive Garden, also rose 6 percent after reporting that sales rose in all of its divisions. And Eastman Kodak lost 14 percent after a judge threw out some of its claims in a trade dispute with Apple and Research in Motion.

The Treasury’s 10-year note fell 6/32, to 99 17/32, and the yield rose to 3.18 percent, from 3.16 percent late Thursday.

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