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A three-peat for Wall Street's bulls


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MooFassa
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 Posting #1: Fri Mar 13th, 2009 00:56

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NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Stocks jumped Thursday, gaining for the third session in a row, as investors scooped up banks and other shares hit in a selloff that left the Dow at 12-year lows.

The Dow Jones industrial average (INDU) gained 240 points, or 3.5%, managing a three days of back-to-back gains for the first time since late January.

The S&P 500 (SPX) index gained 29 points, or 4%. The Nasdaq composite (COMP) gained 54 points, or 4%.

Although it's too soon to tell where stocks are going to go from here, the rally off the lows is nonetheless encouraging, said Dan Genter, president and CEO at RNC Genter Capital Management.


"The market is showing us that if we get to radically oversold positions and things get really irrational, there is money out there that people are willing to put to work," he said.

The major gauges have been on the rise since the Dow and S&P 500 ended Monday at 12-year lows. Bets that regulators may reinstate a rule that limits short selling and talk that a key accounting rule could be suspended or at least modified helped pace the advance.

"We were very oversold through Monday and the market was looking for any kind of excuse to put on a rally," said Mike Stanfield, CEO of VSR Financial Services. "The question is: Will this be the kind of short-term bounce we've seen since the election or will it be something more substantive?"

Stanfield said it all depends on the behavior of the financial sector.

"The market will never get its footing until the financials make a low and hold it," he said. "The market can't be healthy without a healthy financial system."

Congress held a hearing Thursday on mark-to-market accounting. Critics say the accounting rule has hurt the bank sector by forcing companies to write down bad assets at fire-sale prices. Supporters say it provides a clear picture of the assets banks are holding. (Full story)

Bernard Madoff: The architect of a multi-billion dollar Ponzi scheme was sent to jail to await sentencing after pleading guilty to 11 charges for one of the biggest swindles in Wall Street history. (Full story)

GE and GM: Standard & Poor's downgraded GE and GE Capital's long-term credit ratings to AA+ from AAA, with a "stable" outlook. But Wall Street had been speculating that one of the major ratings agencies might issue a downgrade, and the stock had already slumped in anticipation of an announcement. GE shares rallied 12.7% Thursday.

General Motors (GM, Fortune 500) said it won't have to take $2 billion in additional federal loans this month because its cost-cutting efforts have improved its cash position. The stock jumped more than 17%.

Financials: Bank stocks were mostly higher, with Bank of America (BAC, Fortune 500), Wells Fargo (WFC, Fortune 500), Goldman Sachs (GS, Fortune 500) and Morgan Stanley (MS, Fortune 500) all rising. The KBW Bank (BKW) sector index rose around 11%.

The bank sector drove a bigger stock market advance Tuesday after regulators said they may reinstate the "uptick rule" that stops short sellers from driving a floundering stock lower. Critics say the absence of the rule has played a role in the steep selloff of bank stocks this year.

Stocks also got a boost Tuesday after Citigroup (C, Fortune 500) cooled some worries about its future by saying it was profitable in the first two months of the year.

In other financial news, mortgage lender Freddie Mac, now under federal conservatorship, reported its sixth straight quarterly loss late Wednesday and asked the government for another $30.8 billion. Shares were little changed.

Drugmakers: Swiss company Roche Holding said it's buying the remaining 44% of U.S. biotech Genentech it doesn't already own. The $46.8 billion deal ends an almost 8-month battle in which Genentech (DNA) repeatedly spurned Roche's offer. Genentech shares gained 2%.

Biotech Gilead Sciences (GILD) said it will buy drugmaker CV Therapeutics (CVTX) for $1.4 billion. CV shares jumped 31.5%, while Gilead shares were little changed.

Pfizer (PFE, Fortune 500) said that a late-stage clinical trial of its cancer drug Sutent has been stopped early after the drug produced a significant benefit in patients with a rare form of cancer. Shares of the Dow component jumped 7.5%.

Market breadth was positive. On the New York Stock Exchange, winners topped losers by over ten to one on volume of 1.81 billion shares. On the Nasdaq, advancers beat decliners by over 4 to 1 on volume of 2.42 billion shares.

Economy: February retail sales fell 0.1% after falling a revised 1.8% the previous month, the Commerce Department reported Thursday. Sales were expected to have fallen 0.5%, according to a consensus of economists surveyed by Briefing.com.

Sales excluding volatile autos rose 0.7% versus a revised 1.6% in January. Economists thought sales would fall 0.1%.

Another government report showed that the number of Americans filing new claims for unemployment last week rose to 654,000 from a revised 645,000 the previous week. The number of Americans continuing to receive benefits rose to a record 5.3 million.

A third government report showed that household net worth, the difference between assets and liabilities, fell by $11.2 trillion last year.

Friday brings reports on the January trade balance, February import and export prices and the initial March consumer sentiment index from the University of Michigan.

Bonds: Treasury prices gained, lowering the yield on the benchmark 10-year note to 2.85% from 2.9% Wednesday. Treasury prices and yields move in opposite directions.

Lending rates were little changed. The 3-month Libor rate eased to 1.32% from 1.33%, while the overnight Libor rate held at 0.33%, according to Bloomberg.com. Libor is a bank-to-bank lending rate.

Other markets: In global trading, most Asian and European markets ended higher.

In currency trading, the dollar fell versus the euro and gained against the yen.

U.S. light crude oil for April delivery settled up $4.70 to $45.27 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, a gain of over 11%.

COMEX gold for April delivery rose $13.30 to settle at $924 an ounce. 

MooFassa
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 Posting #2: Fri Mar 13th, 2009 01:31

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Wall St extends winning streak

Published: 2009/03/13

NEW YORK: Wall Street extended its winning streak to a third day Thursday as upbeat corporate news and better-than-expected US retail sales data sparked a strong rally for the ailing stock market.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average powered higher by 239.66 points (3.46 per cent) to close at 7,170.06, as the blue-chip index rebounded above the key psychological level of 7,000.

The tech-dominated Nasdaq leapt 54.46 points (3.97 per cent) to 1,426.10 and the broad-market Standard & Poor’s 500 index vaulted 29.38 points (4.07 per cent) to 750.74.

The market focused on upbeat comments from General Electric, General Motors and Bank of America and a stronger-than-expected report on retail sales, helping investors shake off the gloom of the grinding bear market.
 
“A fresh sense of optimism has pushed both stocks and commodities higher this session,” said analysts at Briefing.com.

The rally accelerated after Bank of America chairman and chief executive Kenneth Lewis said the financial giant should generate more than US$100 billion in revenue this year, and close to US$50 billion in pre-tax, pre-provision earnings.

“That kind of cash flow can solve a lot of problems, given time and an improving US economy,” Lewis said.

Earlier, troubled auto giant General Motors said it would not need US$2 billion in loans it had requested from the US government to fund its operations, citing its cost-reduction efforts.

General Electric also helped lift the market even after it lost its top AAA credit rating from Standard & Poor’s. Analysts at Charles Schwab & Co said GE’s comments that the change would have no impact on funding or operations was “soothing concerns” of investors.

On the economic front, data showed US jobless claims rose to a higher than expected 654,000 in the past week as the recession hit the labour market hard.

US retail sales slipped 0.1 per cent in February from the previous month, but the spending patterns were better than expected, with most of the drop linked to auto sales.

Jennifer Lee at BMO Capital Markets said the report “can be considered the second cautiously upbeat reading in a row.”

Following a surprising gain of 1.8 per cent in January spending, she said the key segment of consumer spending “gives a sliver of light in the still-dark economic clouds.

Consumer spending makes up the bulk of US economic activity, and Paul Ferley at RBC Economics said that the report suggests the worst may be over for the recession-ravaged US economy.

Based on the latest data, he predicted an annual drop of 4.8 per cent in US gross domestic product in the first quarter from a 6.2 pace of decline in the fourth quarter.

“Today’s report provides some support to our view that the fourth-quarter drop will represent the deepest slide in activity in the current downturn with the economic weakness easing as we move through 2009,” Ferley said. - AFP

MooFassa
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 Posting #3: Fri Mar 13th, 2009 03:06

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Published: Friday March 13, 2009 MYT 7:33:00 AM
US stocks rally on good news for banks, GM, retailers

NEW YORK: Investors have been clamoring for months for a bit of good news. On Thursday, they got a load of it.

The Dow Jones industrials shot up 240 points, bringing its gains over the past three days to 622 points.

It was the index's biggest three-day jump since last November.

This week's rally got an extra dose of adrenaline after an accounting board told Congress Thursday it may recommend a let-up in accounting rules for troubled banks in three weeks.

Banks have been dogging the market since 2007, so hope that financial institutions might finally get relief in how they value their bad assets spurred a flurry of buying on Wall Street.

"We might find that the banks are not as bad, or not bad at all, if these assets are marked differently," said Doreen Mogavero, president of the New York floor brokerage Mogavero, Lee & Co.

Better-than-expected retail sales figures also helped stocks, as did positive news from four Dow companies: Bank of America Corp., General Electric Co., General Motors Corp., and Pfizer Inc.

Bank of America Corp.'s CEO told reporters his bank was profitable in January and February. Citigroup Inc. triggered this week's rally Tuesday with similar remarks.

Meanwhile, GE's credit rating was cut by less than expected, GM said it will not need a $2 billion loan it previously requested from the government, and Pfizer reported a successful cancer drug trial.

"How all this turned around in a week, I don't know," said Scott Bleier, president of CreateCapital Advisors.

"But it's certainly a better outlook than how it looked two weeks ago."

No one is calling the end to the selling on Wall Street.

The economic picture is too uncertain, and much of this week's rally has been driven by technical factors.

One of those factors is traders' inclination to buy stock to cover "short" bets, or bets that a stock will fall.

But it's been the most reassuring week in months for the stock market.

The Dow Jones Wilshire 5000 index, which reflects nearly all stocks traded in America, has jumped 11.2 percent over the past three sessions.

That's a paper gain of $900 billion.


"There's a lot of money on the sidelines, and a lot of people who've been waiting for the turn to come," Mogavero said.

"I think that probably, people will want to get some of their money in the market."

The Dow rose 239.66, or 3.5 percent, to 7,170.06.

The Standard & Poor's 500 index climbed 29.38, or 4.1 percent, to 750.74.

The Nasdaq composite index gained 54.46, or 4 percent, to 1,426.10.

The Russell 2000 index of smaller companies rose 23.82, or 6.5 percent, to 390.12.

After a modest decline Monday and three days of buying, the Dow is up 8.2 percent so far for the week.

The S&P 500 index is up 9.9 percent and the Nasdaq is up 10.2 percent.

Advancing stocks outnumbered decliners by more than 10 to 1 on the New York Stock Exchange, where volume came to 1.81 billion shares.


Not all of Thursday's data was positive.

The Commerce Department said retail sales dipped by a modest 0.1 percent in February, but the Labor Department reported that first time claims for unemployment benefits rose last week to 654,000 from 639,000 the week before - more than analysts had expected.

Investors are also aware that much of this week's rebound can be attributed to technical factors.

The selloff that hurled the stock market to 12-year lows last week was driven largely by short-selling, when a trader bets on a stock falling by selling borrowed shares.

Traders have now been covering those short bets by buying stocks, especially after the Securities and Exchange Commission said it was considering reinstating the "Uptick Rule."

The rule, eliminated in 2007, aimed at curbing short-selling by only allowing it when a stock edged higher.

Still, investors grew more optimistic about bank stocks after the chairman of the independent Financial Accounting Standards Board told the House Financial Services subcommittee on capital markets that the board "could have the guidance in three weeks" on so-called "mark-to-market" accounting.

Frozen demand in the credit markets has sharply lowered the value of assets having anything to do with real estate or consumer credit - even though most of the loans themselves are still getting paid off.

Those lower asset values have translated into huge losses for banks.

Citigroup rose 8.4 percent, Bank of America rose 19 percent, Wells Fargo & Co. rose 17 percent, and JPMorgan Chase & Co. rose 14 percent.

GM rose 17.2 percent to $2.18 after its chief financial officer said it would not need its federal loan for March.

GE rose nearly 13 percent to $9.57 after Standard & Poor's downgraded the conglomerate by one-notch from "AAA" due to troubles in GE's lending arm.

Meanwhile, pharmaceutical stocks soared Thursday on more acquisition news and a positive drug trial at Pfizer Inc.

Pfizer said it ended a successful trial of its cancer drug Sutent early after data showed the drug met its goal of slowing the progression of pancreatic cancer.

Shares of Pfizer, a Dow component, rose nearly 10 percent to $14.02.

Switzerland's Roche Holding AG agreed to buy the rest of Genentech Inc. for $46.8 billion, while Gilead Sciences Inc. agreed to buy CV Therapeutics Inc. for $1.4 billion.

Earlier this week, drugmakers Merck and Schering-Plough agreed to merge in a $41 billion deal.

Government bond prices rose, driving the yield on the 10-year Treasury note down to 2.86 percent from 2.91 percent late Wednesday.

The dollar strengthened against other major currencies, gold prices gained, and crude oil surged $4.70 to $47.03 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. - AP


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