'us market'에 해당되는 글 3건

  1. 2008.10.17 Stocks End in Positive Territory After Volatile Trading by CEOinIRVINE
  2. 2008.10.14 U.S. Markets Rebound From Last Week by CEOinIRVINE
  3. 2008.10.02 Investors Pulling Billions Out of U.S. Stock Markets by CEOinIRVINE
FINANCIAL MARKET SUMMARY
Symbol Lookup: Companies & Funds
DJIAS&P 500NASDAQMarket Index Charts
DJIA 8,979.26  +401.35    NASDAQ 1,717.71  +89.38    SPX 946.43  +38.59    S  3.33 0.00    LMT  92.61 +5.14    FNM  0.99 -0.01    DJIA 8,979.26  +401.35    NASDAQ 1,717.71  +89.38    SPX 946.43  +38.59    S  3.33 0.00    LMT  92.61 +5.14    FNM  0.99 -0.01    
Personalize Ticker | Updated 4:00 PM, 10/16/2008 Disclaimer | © MarketWatch Inc.
Source: Interactive Data Corp

Stocks staged a late-day rally today and ended a volatile day of trading in positive territory despite lingering recession concerns.

The Dow Jones industrial average was down as much as 376 points at one point, but closed up 4.7 percent, or 401 points, at 8,979. The Standard & Poor's 500-stock index gained 4.3 percent, or 39 points, to end the day at 946.

The tech-heavy Nasdaq rose 5.5 percent, or 89 points, to 1,718. It was helped by a 10.5 percent surge in Yahoo's share price. The Internet firm received a boost from reports that Microsoft's chief executive, Steve Ballmer, said a deal between the companies might still make economic sense. Yahoo rejected a previous offer from Microsoft, which closed up 6.8 percent. Both firms were among the most actively traded companies in the Nasdaq today.

There is a battle between investors who are confident stocks have reached their bottom and others who see more downside to come amid gloomy economic data and corporate earnings. "This is a sucker's rally," said Joseph Brusuelas, chief U.S. economist at California-based Merk Investments. "There's a very difficult period ahead."

Today's gains follow the markets' huge dive yesterday, when the Dow fell more than 700 points.

Analysts said investors no longer question whether there will be a recession, but instead are worried about how long it will last and how deep it will be.

The government's responses to the financial crisis, from lowering interest rates to taking stakes in major banks, are good steps toward stability, economists and analysts have said. But they do not address the more immediate economic problems and have yet to drastically impact the credit squeeze as lenders remain reluctant to lend to each other.

Market volatility has become the new norm, said Doug Roberts, chief investment strategist for New Jersey-based Channel Capital Research. "Right now people are worried things are going to fall off a cliff. Every bit of news moves the market," he said.

Economic data released by the Labor Department today was mixed. New claims for jobless benefits dropped by 16,000 last week to a seasonally adjusted 461,000. That was a bigger drop than expected, but unemployment claims remain high by historical standards. And consumer prices were flat in September, according to the Consumer Price Index, a closely watched barometer of inflation.

Two Federal Reserve-related reports today painted a more bleak economic picture. Factory activity in the mid-Atlantic region is experiencing its largest one-month decline this month, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia, and the region's manufacturing executives expect no growth during the next six months. Also, the Federal Reserve reported today that industrial production fell 2.8 percent in September, the biggest plunge since December 1974.

"While the collapse in the U.S. housing sector and simultaneous drop in consumer confidence has prompted U.S. manufacturers to cut back sharply this summer, it has been the recent banking crisis and credit freeze that has turned the manufacturing recession into a outright collapse," said Michael Woolfolk, senior currency strategist for Bank of New York Mellon, in a research note this morning.

The collapse in industrial production parallels the sizable drop in retail sales released yesterday, punctuating the onset of a recession, analysts said. Retail sales in September took their steepest monthly decline in three years, according to a report released yesterday. Those concerns were amplified by Nation Retail Federation survey today showing that consumers planned to increase holiday-related shopping by 1.9 percent this year, a paltry sum that is the smallest increase since the survey began in 2002.

Investors have also been spooked by the impact of the financial crisis on many firm's balance sheets and their outlook through the rest of the year. Merrill Lynch, which is being acquired by Bank of America, reported a $5 billion loss during its third quarter this morning, while Citigroup reported a loss of $2.8 billion. Both firms have been battered by the credit crisis.

Merrill Lynch was basically flat, registering a 0.6 percent gain, and Citigroup was down 2 percent.

The financial crisis also continues to help drive down crude oil prices as the economic turmoil saps demand. The price of oil fell 6 percent, or $4.55, to $70 a barrel today. Before yesterday, oil had not traded below $75 a barrel in more than a year. But with demand dwindling, many analysts now expect prices to fall to as little as $50 a barrel.

The financial crisis also continues to churn overseas. Swiss authorities moved to stabilize financial giant UBS today, agreeing to move $60 billion in troubled assets from the company's books into a special government-backed fund.

Foreign markets were down. London's FTSE 100 and the CAC 40 in Paris were down more than 5 percent, and Germany's DAX fell 6.7 percent today. But the losses were larger in Asia as the Nikkei stock average in Japan closed down more than 11 percent.






Posted by CEOinIRVINE
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DJIAS&P 500NASDAQMarket Index Charts
DJIA 9,387.61  +936.42    NASDAQ 1,844.25  +194.74    SPX 1,003.35  +104.13    S  0.00 0.00    LMT  90.26 +2.78    FNM  1.13 +0.06    DJIA 9,387.61  +936.42    NASDAQ 1,844.25  +194.74    SPX 1,003.35  +104.13    S  0.00 0.00    LMT  90.26 +2.78    FNM  1.13 +0.06    
Personalize Ticker | Updated 4:00 PM, 10/13/2008 Disclaimer | © MarketWatch Inc.
Source: Interactive Data Corp

U.S. Markets Rebound From Last Week

Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, October 13, 2008; 5:00 PM

Wall Street, taking note of U.S. and world regulators' efforts to combat the financial crisis, rebounded today from last week's debacle with a massive rally that propelled the Dow Jones industrial average to its largest daily point gain ever and the largest percentage increase since the depths of the Depression.


After posting their worst week in history, the Dow Jones industrial average and the Standard & Poor's 500-stock index both posted big gains today. The Dow closed up 11 percent, or 936 points. It was the Dow's largest single-day point gain, far surpassing the jump of 499 points on March 16, 2000.

Only four other days -- all during the late 1920s and early 1930s -- have seen larger percentage gains for the Dow.

The S&P was up 11.6 percent, or 104 points, in its best one-day gain since 1939. The tech-heavy Nasdaq was up 11.8 percent, or 195 points.

Stocks snapped an eight-day losing streak fueled by deepening concerns of a global recession. The Dow and S&P both lost 18 percent of their value last week, the worst week in Wall Street history.

Frustrated investors and traders appear cheered today by pledges of a coordinated global approach following a meeting of the finance ministers from the world's wealthiest countries, known as the Group of Seven, this weekend in Washington.

European leaders have said they would inject new capital into troubled banks and guarantee interbank lending. Britain announced today it would spend $64 billion to bail out three major banks: Royal Bank of Scotland, HBOS and Lloyds.

The Treasury Department is also working on a plan to buy stakes in troubled banks. The head of the government's $700 billion financial rescue plan began to outline details of the program today and said appointments would be announced soon. "A program as large and complex as this would normally take months -- or even years -- to establish," Neel Kashkari, interim assistant Treasury secretary for financial stability, said this morning. "We don't have months or years."

U.S. regulators are expected to announce an expanded response to the crisis as soon as tomorrow morning. "It feels like we're beginning to get the feeling that regulators and governments are doing what they have to, to get the liquidity flowing again," said John Wilson, co-head of the equity group at Morgan Keegan, in Memphis.

After days of sell-offs, today's rally has also unleashed bargain hunters. "I think there are some people out there that think things are so bad it can't get much worse," said Wilson. Institutional and individual investors have pulled a tremendous amount of money out of the market in recent weeks that they may be willing to spend again, he said.

"I think right now, anything that helps confidence will help the market," said Wilson.

Overseas markets surged on the efforts. London's FTSE finished up 7 percent, while Germany's DAX and the CAC40 in Paris were up 10.6 percent and 9.2 percent respectively. The Japanese stock market was closed today, but other Asian indexes had gains of anywhere from 3 percent to more than 10 percent in Hong Kong.





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FINANCIAL MARKET SUMMARY
Symbol Lookup: Companies & Funds
DJIAS&P 500NASDAQMarket Index Charts
DJIA 10,831.07  -19.59    NASDAQ 2,069.40  -22.48    SPX 1,161.06  -3.68    S  6.54 +0.44    LMT  108.85 -0.82    FNM  1.66 +0.13    DJIA 10,831.07  -19.59    NASDAQ 2,069.40  -22.48    SPX 1,161.06  -3.68    S  6.54 +0.44    LMT  108.85 -0.82    FNM  1.66 +0.13    
Personalize Ticker | Updated 4:02 PM, 10/1/2008 Disclaimer | © MarketWatch Inc.
Source: Interactive Data Corp
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, October 1, 2008; 5:26 PM

The U.S. finanical crisis last month appears to have led to a major pullback by investors who withdrew billions of dollars from equity mutual funds and bonds, according to an analysis released today by a financial research firm.

During September, investors pulled $22 billion from U.S. equity mutual funds, compared with $2 billion in August, according to the data from TrimTabs Investment Research, which publishes detailed coverage of U.S. stock market liquidity. At the same time $24 billion was also withdrawn from bonds during September, the largest extraction in a single-month.

"Usually when people leave equities they go to bonds, this time they are leaving bonds as well. Because of the credit problems, they are worried about defaults on bonds, everybody is going to the safest forms of cash they can find," said Conrad Gann, president and chief operating officer of TrimTabs. "People are scared they don't want risky investments, there is risk aversion -- everybody is averting risk in all of its forms, credit or equity."

Such apprehension appeared to be playing out today on Wall Street where the markets stalled as investors kept an eye on Washington to see if Congress would be able to pass the $700 billion financial rescue plan. 

Investors are hopeful that the plan, which the House defeated Monday, will pass the Senate tonight. But many remain wary about whether it has enough support to pass the House on a second try, analysts said.

The Dow Jones industrial average, which fell as much as 200 points early in the day, closed down nearly 20 points while the technology heavy Nasdaq lost more than 22 points and the broader Standard & Poor's 500 stock index fell nearly 4 points.

U.S. stocks, which recorded historic sell-off Monday after the House action, soared yesterday as investors regained confidence that some form of the bailout package would gain approval. Some analysts said today's lackluster trading might be a result of investors taking their profits from yesterday.

"US equity markets clawed back in the afternoon and recouped most of the early losses, but remain vulnerable to the bailout news stream," a Brown Brothers Harriman research note concluded today.

"People were taken by surprise the last time when the House didn't pass" the financial rescue plan, said Bill Stone, chief investment strategist for PNC Wealth Management. "You can say, once bitten, twice shy."

The legislation is considered central to keeping credit markets flowing as banks remain reluctant to loan money to each other. It would allow the government to buy the toxic mortgage assets weighing down financial firms balance sheets. But opponents have balked at the price and called it a bailout of the Wall Street firms that caused the current turmoil.

The Senate version is expected to include a provision allowing the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation to raise the government's guarantee of bank deposits beyond the current limit of $100,000 on each standard account. Advocates of that effort, including both presidential candidates, say it will provide bank depositors with a better sense of security.

Wall Street may be buoyed today by a move by securities regulators and accounting rule-makers to allow banks greater power to decide the value of their investments, even if market data suggest that prices should be lower. That could allow some banks to report smaller losses.

Posted by CEOinIRVINE
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