April 29, 2024

Wall Street Rally Takes a Break

Stocks on Wall Street opened lower on Tuesday as investors paused after a seven-session string of gains and after a warning from the Bundesbank’s chief that the euro zone crisis has not ended.

The Standard Poor’s 500-stock index fell 0.1 percent in morning trading, the Dow Jones industrial average was flat and the Nasdaq composite index fell 0.1 percent. European markets were generally higher.

Both the Dow and benchmark S.P. 500 index have rallied, with the Dow closing at another record high on Monday and the S.P. within 10 points of its closing high of 1,565.15 points, set on Oct. 9, 2007.

Any pullback may be short-lived, however, as investors have been using recent dips as a buying opportunity.

Sounding a note of caution in Europe, Jens Weidmann, the head of the Bundesbank, Germany’s central bank, said the euro zone’s “crisis is not over despite the recent calm on financial markets.” Mr. Weidmann, who is also a member of the European Central Bank’s governing council, said that the region’s economic stability remains on shaky ground.

Still, investors’ confidence has grown on Wall Street, leading to a gain of more than 9 percent by the S.P. Signs of improvement in the economy and the Federal Reserve’s quantitative easing have helped to drive the gains.

“The data has been improving. No horror stories out of Europe at the moment, and China is on the mend,” said Frank Lesh, a futures analyst and broker at FuturePath Trading L.L.C. in Chicago.

Yum Brands, the parent company of the KFC restaurant chain, advanced 3.4 percent in early trading after reporting an unexpected rise in February sales in China.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/13/business/daily-stock-market-activity.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

After Cashing In on Job Cuts, Wall St. Looks to Worker Upturn

Wall Street is hopeful that American companies, after years of gaining ground at the expense of their employees, will start to succeed because of the rising fortune of those workers.

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. What’s more, skeptical strategists say there are significant threats ahead for both consumers and corporations. The basic fear in trading circles is that the economic recovery will not be able to survive the Fed’s ending its bond-buying programs. When the Fed does step back from its support for the market, it is expected to send up interest rates, which could dampen lending and the housing market.

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

Dow Hits 3rd New High, Helped by Jobless Report

The stock market rose slightly on Thursday, pushing the Dow Jones industrial average to a new nominal high after it surpassed its previous peak two days ago. The gains came after a new report provided evidence that hiring was picking up.

The Labor Department reported that the number of Americans seeking unemployment benefits fell by 7,000 last week, driving the four-week average to its lowest point in five years. The drop in new jobless claims is a positive sign ahead of Friday’s employment report.

The Dow industrials rose 33.25 points, or 0.2 percent, to 14,329.49. The Standard Poor’s 500-stock index gained 2.80 points, or 0.2 percent, to 1,544.26. Both indexes rose for the fifth consecutive day.

The S. P. 500 is closing in on its own high close of 1,565.15, which was reached on Oct. 9, 2007, the same day as the Dow’s previous peak. The S. P. 500 would need to rise 20.89 points, or 1.4 percent, to set a nominal record, though both indexes are still far below their peaks if inflation is taken into account.

Investors have been buying stocks on optimism that employers are slowly starting to hire again and that the housing market is recovering. Growing company earnings are also encouraging investors to enter the market. The Dow is 9.4 percent higher so far this year and the S. P. 500 is up 8.3 percent.

“If you have a multiyear time horizon, equities are an attractive asset, but don’t be surprised to see some volatility, especially after the big run we’ve had,” said Michael Sheldon, chief market strategist at the RDM Financial Group.

The Nasdaq composite index advanced 9.72 points, or 0.3 percent, to 3,232.09. It is up 7 percent this year, but it is well below its high of more than 5,000, reached during the dot-com boom in 2000.

Boeing helped lead the Dow higher on Thursday, advancing $1.97, or 2.5 percent, to $81.05 after reports that American regulators were poised to approve a plan within days to permit the company to begin test flights of its 787 Dreamliner jet. The 787 fleet has been grounded since Jan. 16 because of safety concerns about the plane’s batteries.

Jeffrey Saut, chief investment strategist at Raymond James, predicted that any sell-off in stocks might be short-lived as investors who have missed out on the rally since the start of the year jump into the market.

“The rally is going to go higher than most people think,” Mr. Saut said. “This thing has caught most money managers flat-footed.”

The stock market’s rally this year has been helped in no small part by continuing economic stimulus from the Federal Reserve, which is buying $85 billion each month in Treasury bonds and mortgage-backed securities. That has kept interest rates near historical lows, reducing borrowing costs and encouraging investors to move money out of conservative investments like bonds and into stocks.

On Thursday, however, interest rates moved higher in the bond market. The price of the 10-year Treasury note fell 16/32, to 100 2/32, while its yield rose to 2 percent from 1.94 percent late on Wednesday.

Among the stocks making big moves, PetSmart fell $4.37, or 6.6 percent, to $62.18 after the company reported its fiscal fourth-quarter earnings. Profits for the pet store chain rose, but its forecast for this year disappointed investors.

Pier 1 Imports fell 96 cents to $22.28 after the company issued an earnings forecast that was below Wall Street analysts’ estimates.

The supermarket chain Kroger rose 89 cents, or 3 percent, to $30.25 after the company’s fourth-quarter profit handily beat Wall Street expectations.

Gap rose $1.41, or 4.1 percent, to $35.87 after it said a crucial revenue measure rose more than expected in February, helped by sales at its Gap and Old Navy stores.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/08/business/economy/daily-stock-market-activity.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Markets Near Milestone Highs as Federal Reserve Reassures on Rates

The Dow Jones industrial average came within 100 points of a milestone high on Wednesday after rising sharply for a second consecutive day.

The market surged in response to more evidence that the Federal Reserve will keep interest rates low, that housing will continue recovering and that shoppers are not cutting back on spending, even with a payroll tax increase.

All but one of the 30 stocks in the Dow Jones industrial average rose, as did all 10 industries in the Standard Poor’s 500-stock index.

The Dow rose 175.24 points, or 1.3 percent, to 14,075.37. The index is now less than 100 points away from its close of 14,164 in October 2007. It has gained 291 points in the last two days, erasing its decline of 216 points on Monday, when inconclusive results from an election in Italy renewed worries that Europe’s fiscal crisis could flare up again.

“The market psychology has clearly shifted. It’s no longer sell the rally; it’s buy the dips,” said Dan Veru, chief investment officer at Palisade Capital Management. “The economic data continues to be strong.”

Stocks have surged, with the Dow up 7.4 percent since the start of the year. Earnings for S. P. 500 companies are set to climb 7.8 percent in the fourth quarter, the third consecutive quarter of growth, according to data from SP Capital IQ.

The S. P. 500-stock index gained 19.05 points, or 1.3 percent, to 1,515.99 on Wednesday. It is 6.3 percent higher for the year and about 3.2 percent short of its nominal record close of 1,565. The Nasdaq composite index rose 32.61 points, or 1.04 percent, to 3,162.26.

Investors were encouraged that the Federal Reserve chairman, Ben S. Bernanke, stood behind the central bank’s low-interest-rate policies as he faced lawmakers for a second day. His comments eased worries about the bank’s resolve to continue the program. Those worries sprang up last week when minutes from the bank’s last policy meeting revealed disagreement about the policy among Fed officials.

Interest rates were steady. The Treasury’s benchmark 10-year note fell 4/32, to 100 29/32, and the yield rose to 1.90 percent from 1.89 percent late Tuesday.

The number of Americans who signed contracts to buy homes rose in January to the highest level in almost three years. The report continued a string of positive housing news, including the government’s announcement on Tuesday that sales of new homes rose 16 percent last month to the highest level since July 2008.

Home builder stocks rose for the second consecutive day. The PulteGroup climbed 25 cents, or 1.3 percent, to $19.30, after rising 5.7 percent the day before.

“Some encouraging news for the bulls has been the housing data that has come out over the past couple of days,” said Todd Salamone, director of research at Schaeffer’s Investment Research.

Mr. Salamone said he remained “extremely bullish” on stocks in the medium and long term, but cautioned that there might be a pullback in the coming days.

Discount retailers rose on Wednesday. Dollar Tree jumped $4.31, or 10.5 percent, to $45.39 after reporting a profit increase of more than 20 percent. Dollar General rose $1.61, or 3.6 percent, to $46.56. Family Dollar Stores rose $1.39, or 2.5 percent, to $57.68.

Priceline.com gained $17.42, or 2.6 percent, to $695.91 after reporting that its net income grew in the fourth quarter on increased bookings.

First Solar fell $4.32, or 13.8 percent, to $27.04 after the company posted disappointing sales for the fourth quarter and gave a weak early outlook for the year.

Target, the discount retail chain, fell 93 cents, or 1.5 percent, to $63.12. The company reported that its quarterly income fell 2 percent as it dealt with intense competition during the holiday shopping season.

DreamWorks Animation fell 30 cents, or 1.8 percent, to $16.31 after posting a loss of $82.7 million. The company booked a write-off on its November release, “Rise of the Guardians,” and on a coming movie that needs to be reworked.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/28/business/daily-stock-market-activity.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Little Movement on Wall Street

Wall Street stocks moved sharply higher on Wednesday as investors awaited a second round of testimony in Congress by the Federal Reserve chairman, Ben S. Bernanke, for clarity on the longevity of the Fed’s economic stimulus program.

The Standard Poor’s 500-stock index added 0.9 percent, the Dow Jones industrial average rose 0.8 percent and the Nasdaq composite jumped 1 percent in afternoon trading.

“Of course, Bernanke is in the spotlight again but I don’t expect him to vary from his comments from yesterday,” said Peter Cardillo, chief market economist at Rockwell Global Capital in New York.

A day earlier, Mr. Bernanke strongly defended the Fed’s monetary stimulus efforts before Congress. His comments eased worries in the financial markets over an early retreat from the Fed’s bond buying program, which had been triggered by minutes of the Fed’s January meeting released a week ago.

His remarks, along with data showing sales of new homes hit a four and a half year high, helped Wall Street stocks rebound Tuesday from their worst decline since November.

Up 6 percent for the year, the S.P. 500 was within reach of record highs a week ago, before the minutes from the Fed’s January meeting were released. Since then, the index has shed 1 percent.

In earnings news, Target posted a lower quarterly profit as sales of food and value-priced items only partially mitigated weakness in holiday spending. The stock fell 1.3 percent.

Dollar Tree reported a higher quarterly profit as the chain controlled costs and as consumer spending improved. The stock rose 10.2 percent.

In Europe, shares rose almost 2 percent, steadying after the previous session’s sharp losses, though jitters over the euro zone kept a lid on gains.

Italy’s 10-year debt costs rose more than half a percentage point at the first longer-term auction since an inconclusive parliamentary election, although they remained below the psychologically important level of 5 percent.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/28/business/daily-stock-market-activity.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Wall Street Sheds Morning Gains

After beginning the day with a partial rebound from Monday’s steep drop, stocks on Wall Street gave up some of their gains Tuesday in the course of Congressional testimony by Ben S. Bernanke, the Federal Reserve chairman.

In afternoon trading, the Standard Poor’s 500-stock index was up 0.1 percent, while the Dow Jones industrial average rose 0.6 percent. The Nasdaq composite index was down 0.2 percent.

In his prepared testimony before the Senate Banking Committee, Mr. Bernanke defended the Fed’s bond-buying program and said the economy was growing at a “moderate if somewhat uneven pace.” Senators were questioning him on the prospects for a global currency war and the potential economic effects of the latest budget impasse in Congress.

The major indexes fell more than 1 percent on Monday, with the S.P. 500 recording its biggest daily drop since November. The falloff came as investors fretted that if Italy does not undertake reforms, the euro zone could once again be destabilized. The Euro Stoxx 50 index was off more than 3 percent in late trading Tuesday.

Groups in Italy opposed to economic reforms posted a strong showing in the recent election, resulting in a political deadlock with a comedian’s protest party leading the poll and no group securing a clear majority in Parliament.

“We’ve gone to an environment of political stability to instability, and until we get some type of clarity over who is in charge, which could take days, the market will have renewed concerns,” said Art Hogan, managing director of Lazard Capital Markets in New York.

Still, market participants speculated that a coalition government would eventually emerge in Italy and ease worries about a new euro zone crisis.

The early market gains suggested the recent trend of investors buying on dips would continue. Last week, concerns that the Federal Reserve might roll back its stimulus efforts earlier than expected prompted a sharp two-day decline, though equities recovered most of the lost ground by the end of the week.

“Investors are taking advantage of the drop, and once some kind of coalition government is formed, most of our concerns will be put to rest,” Mr. Hogan said.

Home Depot reported adjusted earnings and sales that beat expectations, sending shares up more than 5 percent.

Macy’s rose 3.1 percent after stating it expected full-year earnings to be above analysts’ forecasts because of strong sales in the holiday period.

For the benchmark S.P. 500, 1,500 points will be watched as a key benchmark after the index closed below it on Monday for the first time since Feb. 4, with selling accelerating after falling below it. An inability to break back above it could portend further losses.

Financial shares may be among the most volatile, as that sector is closely tied to the pace of global economic growth. Morgan Stanley was one of the top percentage losers on the S.P. on Monday, dropping more than 6 percent on concerns about the company’s exposure to European debt. It was up 0.4 percent.

This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:

Correction: February 26, 2013

Because of an editing error, an earlier version of this article misidentified the Senate panel before which Ben S. Bernanke, the Federal Reserve chairman, was testifying Tuesday. It was the Banking Committee, not the Finance Committee.

 

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/27/business/daily-stock-market-activity.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Fundamentally: Investors Rediscover Risk-Taking Abroad

RISK-TAKING may be staging a comeback overseas.

While equities around the world soared last year, the stock market rebound abroad was decidedly different from the one that sent the Standard Poor’s 500-stock index up 16 percent in 2012.

In the United States, the most economically sensitive stocks, like shares of banks and other financial businesses, posted the biggest gains as investors grew confident that an economic recovery was at hand. Overseas, by contrast, it was the defensive-oriented shares like health care and consumer staples stocks that performed the best for most of the year.

What’s more, investors favored stocks in the developed world over riskier but faster-growing emerging markets equities.

This is not all that surprising. “The economic situation abroad in the last 12 to 18 months has either been worse or has slowed more dramatically than in the U.S., creating an even bigger ‘risk off’ mind-set in those markets,” said James W. Paulsen, chief investment strategist at Wells Capital Management.

Yet Mr. Paulsen believes that investors’ appetite for risk-taking overseas is likely to improve. In fact, that process may have already begun.

Among the early signs are that economically cyclical sectors, like financial stocks in the MSCI EAFE index of foreign equities, have been outperforming defensive areas like health care and consumer staples since December.

Part of this can be attributed to the growing clarity about the state of the global economy, money managers say. It is not so much that the economy is booming, but that some of the greatest potential dangers seem to have receded.

Most prominently, concerns about a euro zone breakup have abated since Mario Draghi, president of the European Central Bank, declared that the bank would do “whatever it takes” to save the euro. Ever since that announcement, in late July, European equities have been in rally mode.

“In the international markets, you saw the removal of major tail risks last year, particularly in Europe,” said Jason A. White, a portfolio specialist at T. Rowe Price.

Meanwhile, fears over China’s slowdown seemed to subside at the end of last year on signs that the world’s second largest economy was finally beginning to re-accelerate. In November, government data showed that industrial output and retail sales in China grew much faster than expected, bolstering the bullish case for Chinese and emerging-market stocks. Since then, the Shanghai Stock Exchange Composite Index has soared nearly 20 percent.

The improving global economy, though, isn’t the only reason risk-taking may be re-emerging.

Money managers note that fear over Europe’s debt crisis has been driving investors into defensive-oriented stocks overseas for several years. This is particularly true for shares of consumer companies that manufacture staples like food and household products that continue to be in demand regardless of the health of the economy.

“In an environment where returns for the equity markets were quite poor, you saw very decent returns in those staples,” said Harry Hartford, president of Causeway Capital Management. As a result, though, “consumer staples outside the U.S. looks pretty fully priced,” he said.

Take Diageo. Shares of the British spirits maker, which has sales in about 180 countries, have climbed more than 26 percent a year for the last three years. That means Diageo shares now trade at a price/earnings ratio of more than 18, based on forecast profits. By comparison, the average P/E for MSCI EAFE stocks is less than 14.

Unilever, the packaged food and household goods company, is another example. In 2008, amid the global financial crisis, the stock was trading at around 11 times earnings. Today, Unilever’s P/E ratio stands at 17 times earnings.

“A lot of the defensive industries had big runs, so valuations got extended,” said W. George Greig, head of international investing for the asset manager William Blair Company. As a consequence, he said, “some investors are starting to say that the defensive stocks aren’t as defensive as they thought.”

NOT all money managers are convinced that the worst of the economic storm is behind us. “We know that after a financial crisis, it takes a long time to recover,” said Simon Hallett, chief investment officer for the asset manager Harding Loevner. “We think a conservative approach is still appropriate — there are still an awful lot of things that can go wrong.”

Mr. Greig said investors were not seeking economically sensitive stocks out of a newfound sense of euphoria. “This is not a venturesome ‘risk on’ mind-set,” he said. Rather, investors are reluctantly seeking out cyclically oriented stocks because their valuations are so low that they now look compelling, and there may be better values in areas that had been considered riskier.

Paul J. Lim is a senior editor at Money magazine. E-mail: fund@nytimes.com.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/24/your-money/investors-rediscover-risk-taking-abroad.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Wealth Matters: Reasons to Avoid Buying Stocks, and Why You Should Ignore Them

The list, adding up to 78 for each of the years from 1934 to 2012, was compiled by Bel Air Investment Advisors.

But the punch line to this list was that stocks went up by an annual compounded rate of 10.59 percent over those 78 years, with occasional plateaus, and that $1 million invested in 1934 was worth $2.4 billion in 2012.

As for the last three years, the list singled out the European financial crisis in 2010, the downgrade of United States’ credit rating in 2011 and the political polarization of 2012. Investors were, in fact, generally reluctant to buy stocks. Yet in each of those years, stocks either rose in value or, at worst, were flat.

The reason for such hesitancy is obvious. Investors are still scarred from the 2008 crash and they perceive stocks as risky, a feeling reinforced by a good bit of volatility in the markets in recent years. Yet as stocks rallied earlier this year, money from individual investors began to trickle back into equity funds. This could be good for an intrepid few.

“The stock market is the same place it was in 2000 with double the earnings,” said Todd M. Morgan, senior managing director at Bel Air Investment Advisors. “Stocks are set to outperform bonds over the next three to five years.”

This may very well be true, but most people still think fearfully about stocks. What would it take to get more people to buy stocks? And by this, I don’t mean going all in as investors did in the late 1990s, but creating some semblance of a balanced portfolio.

Mr. Morgan and other advisers said that investors are being misled by talk about near-record levels for the Dow Jones and Standard Poor’s 500-stock index today. When adjusted for inflation, the levels approached earlier this year are not true highs. A new high for the Dow, for example, would be around 15,600.

What is more telling are the earnings and dividends of companies. Niall J. Gannon, executive director of wealth management at the Gannon Group at Morgan Stanley, calculated that the dividends on S. P. 500 stocks were $15.97 in 2000 and $31.25 in 2012. Earnings per share were $56 in 2000 and $101 in 2012. In other words, two major measures of a stock’s attractiveness have doubled in the last 12 years, but the index has not kept pace.

“A big mirage is going on in investors’ minds,” Mr. Gannon said. “They think stocks are expensive because they’ve used index levels as the measure.”

And investors aren’t confident that stocks will continue to rise, given the volatility in recent years. They may well fall in the short term, but over the next few years they are more likely to give investors a better return than bonds. Mr. Gannon pointed to an earnings yield on the S. P. 500 of around 7 percent.

But these are rational arguments for individual companies. They do not account for concerns that the actions of the Federal Reserve have skewed stock prices, another rational fear.

Michael Sonnenfeldt, the founder of Tiger 21, an investment club whose members each have at least $10 million to invest, said the feeling from the group’s annual conference was that the 14,000 level on the Dow was worrisome because it could be the result of all the money the Federal Reserve has put into the system and not based on company fundamentals.

The group, he said, was also worried that the Federal Reserve, having kept interest rates artificially low for so long, could have created a situation where investors suddenly demand higher interest rates at a government bond auction. A crisis like that could lead to deflation, and not inflation — where stocks are considered a hedge.

What’s telling is that Tiger 21 members reported increasing their allocation to equities by 3 percentage points in the last six months. “It’s not a stampede,” he said. “The focus has been on dividend-paying stocks, not growth stocks or tech stocks.”

For people with far less than $10 million to invest, the catalyst to buy stocks will probably be losing money in the bonds they own. “Over the last three years, you’ve lost out not being in stocks,” said Bernie Williams, vice president of discretionary money management at USAA Investments. “But you still made money in bonds. From that perspective, investors are not really feeling the pain.”

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/23/your-money/reasons-to-avoid-buying-stocks-and-why-you-should-ignore-them.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Markets, Uneasy Over Economic Data, Continue to Fall

Wall Street lost ground for a second day on Thursday after weak economic reports, reflecting continued investor concern about the Federal Reserve’s resolve to keep bolstering the economy.

Signaling that the labor market remains in a slow recovery, the government said more people applied for unemployment benefits last week. The four-week average, a less volatile measure, rose to the highest in six weeks.

The Dow Jones industrial average fell 46.92 points, or 0.3 percent, to close at 13,880.62.

The Standard Poor’s 500-stock index dropped 9.53 points, or 0.6 percent, to 1,502.42, setting it on a path for its first weekly loss of the year. The Nasdaq composite index lost 32.92 points, or 1 percent, to 3,131.49.

The stock market indexes have climbed this year to the highest levels since the financial crisis, but Wall Street may be ready to retreat, said Kim Caughey Forrest, senior analyst with Fort Pitt Capital Group, a portfolio management firm.

”I think the market has gotten ahead of itself,” she said. She said fourth-quarter earnings had generally met expectations, but only after those expectations were reduced because of dire projections companies made in November and December.

Wal-Mart Stores rose $1.05, or 1.5 percent, to $70.26 after beating analysts’ profit forecasts in the fourth quarter. However, the company, the nation’s largest retailer, warned of a slow start to the year.

After a strong start to the holiday season, Wal-Mart Stores said, the first three weeks of December were weak, and business has been volatile since then. The company attributed some of the weakness to a delay in tax refund checks that have left people short of cash. Walmart customers also have less money to spend because a temporary payroll tax cut expired in December.

“Everybody’s gotten a 2 percent pay cut, and people who file their taxes early are not getting a refund back in a timely manner,” Ms. Forrest said.

The Safeway supermarket chain was the biggest gainer in the S. P. 500, rising $2.84, or 14.1 percent, to $22.97, after it said its net income jumped 13 percent in the fourth quarter, helped by higher gift and prepaid card revenue.

Tesla Motors plunged a day after reporting that its fourth-quarter net loss grew 10 percent on costs related to production of its new Model S electric car. The stock fell $3.38, or 8.8 percent, to $35.16.

Earlier, Asian and European stocks had closed sharply lower. The sell-off began Wednesday afternoon in New York after minutes from the Fed’s latest meeting were released. The account showed that some policy makers want to wind down bond purchases and other measures aimed at bolstering the economy.

The account also revealed new divisions over the Fed’s low-interest rate policies. There is no sign of inflation, yet there was more evidence that some Fed officials are ready to ease off the stimulus programs before the economy has fully recovered.

“Thinking maybe interest rates will creep higher, this is a very chilling scenario” for the market, Ms. Forrest said.

Interest rates, however, slipped on Thursday as demand increased for safer assets than stocks. The price of the Treasury’s 10-year note rose 11/32, to 100 88/32, while its yield fell to 1.97 percent from 2.01 percent late Wednesday.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/22/business/daily-stock-market-activity.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Strategies: Stock Market Keeps Ignoring Washington’s Gloom

Since March 2009, the Standard Poor’s 500-stock index has risen 125 percent. This year, the S. P. 500 hasn’t fallen for even a single week.

Irrationally or not, some investors who were on the sidelines have become emboldened enough by the rally to start buying stocks, fund flow data shows.

Yet this effervescence belies some ominous developments in politics and the economy. After the State of the Union address by President Obama on Tuesday — and the negative reaction to it among many Republicans in Congress — it seemed quite possible that $1.2 trillion in automatic government spending cuts might begin in just a few weeks, delivering yet another blow to an already lackluster economy. Most economists had expected minimal growth this year, even without a new shock from Washington — or from Europe or anywhere else.

These apparently conflicting pictures pose a quandary for market strategists. Which signals should an investor emphasize: the signs of disharmony in Washington and the negative indicators for the economy, or the upward trend of the stock market?

For Laszlo Birinyi, the veteran strategist and longtime market bull, the contest isn’t close. He says he starts by assuming that the market is smarter than any analyst. “We focus on the market itself, on what it is actually telling us,” he said. “We don’t worry about the cosmic issues that a lot of people get concerned about, We worry about the stock market ticker. And it’s telling us the market is going up.”

In September 2009, when very few strategists were overtly bullish, Mr. Birinyi, president of Birinyi Associates, the stock market research firm in Westport, Conn., told me that we were in the early stages of a classic bull market. That analysis was prescient. The S. P. 500 has returned more than 50 percent since then.

In a conversation last week, he said we were in the final stage of that bull market. “The bull market probably has between a year and three years to go,” he said. “I can’t time it. I can only point out the trend.”

Mr. Birinyi, formerly chief stock market analyst at Salomon Brothers, uses a combination of quantitative and subjective analysis. He carefully meters money flows into and out of stocks and scours business coverage in newspapers and magazines, which he sees as barometers of popular sentiment.

Money flow, as he measures it, comes from an algorithm he devised at Salomon. “Trades made on a price uptick are treated as buyer-initiated,” said Jeffrey Yale Rubin, director of research at Birinyi Associates. “On a downtick, it’s seller-initiated.”

As Mr. Birinyi puts it, “we care about what traders are actually doing with the money.” Mutual fund flows are widely tracked, he said, “but they aren’t as critical as most people generally think.” They tell you how much money is being given to a money manager — an intermediary. “The critical issue is how that intermediary is actually using the money,” he said.

The firm’s calculations indicate that in January, net money flows into the stocks of the S. P. 500 — as opposed to money flowing into mutual funds — amounted to $15.6 billion. This compares with a net outflow of $10.4 billion in October, just before market sentiment began to change.

Based on the history of long bull markets — particularly those of 1962, 1974, 1982, 1990 and 2002 — such upswings usually have four stages, Mr. Birinyi said. They begin with reluctance, shift to consolidation and then move to “grudging acceptance.” The last phase, which he says we have just entered, is exuberance: “This is a point where people say, yes, the economy isn’t going into recession right away, companies are making money, interest rates are not going through the roof, and all the concerns we have had for some time perhaps were too negative.”

He says it’s as if people are realizing: “The market isn’t like the New York subway system. There isn’t another train coming right after this one. This is it, this is the last train. You’d better get on board.”

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/17/your-money/stock-market-keeps-ignoring-washingtons-gloom.html?partner=rss&emc=rss