
Stocks struggle as Fed pledges aid if needed
But the Dow crawls back nearly to break even as the Federal Reserve extends a small stimulus move because of job growth and European worries. It promises more action if conditions worsen. Asian stocks drop on a weak China manufacturing report.
Updated: 11 p.m. ETThe Federal Reserve gave the stock market a little of what it wanted when policy makers agreed to extend a program for selling short-term securities and buying longer-term issues in a bid to encourage economic growth. And the Fed said it was ready to do more if needed.
The news was greeted at first with some cheer, but investors seemed to conclude the decision wasn't enough. After a day of seesaw trading, the major averages ended the day little changed. The Dow Jones industrials ($INDU) closed down 13 points to 12,824 after falling as many as 92 points after the Fed announcement and as many as 87 points after Chairman Ben Bernanke's news conference.
The central bank said it will keep its key federal funds rate near zero, a level likely to remain in place through late 2014. In a statement, the Federal Open Market Committee, the Fed's rate-making body, said the economy had softened since its last meeting in April, largely because of economic problems in Europe and Asia. Job growth has slowed, with the U.S. unemployment rate at 8.2% in May.
Many traders had hoped the Fed would start a new round of so-called quantitative easing, a broad program of purchases of government securities. Instead, the Fed opted to continue through the end of the year what's known as Operation Twist, the program of selling the short-term securities and buying longer-term bonds.
The Dow's loss was slight. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index ($INX) had nearly as small a loss: just 2 points to 1,356. The Nasdaq Composite Index ($COMPX) fared a touch better, rising 1 point to 2,930.
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The Nasdaq-100 Index ($NDX), which tracks the largest Nasdaq stocks, gained 3 points to 2,623. Apple (AAPL), which represents some 17% of the market capitalization of the index, was off $1.76 to $585.74, subtracting roughly 2 points from the index.
The market's decline came after a solid rally on Tuesday that saw the Dow rise 96 points. The Dow, S&P 500 and Nasdaq are up more than 6% since bottoming early in June, mostly in hopes of a big Fed move to stimulate the economy.
The Fed's decision came as European stocks moved higher. Greece finally swore in a new government, headed by conservative leader Antonis Samaras. And it appeared that Germany will give up its long-standing opposition to using eurozone bailout funds to buy up bonds from Spain and Italy. Yields on 10-year bonds from both countries were lower today.
A weak open on Thursday?
Futures trading suggests a week open for U.S. stocks after a flash purchasing managers index of manufacturing in China fell to 48.1 in June from 48.4 in May. It's the 8th consecutive month of contraction. New export orders fell to 45.9, the lowest level since March 2009, and input and output prices fell to their lowest levels in 2 years.
Asian stocks were mostly lower.
Here at home, reports are due Thursday on initial jobless claims, existing-home sales and manufacturing in the Philadelphia Federal Reserve Bank's service area. The Conference Board also reports on leading economic indicators.
Bed, Bath and Beyond's weak guidance may weigh on markets
Markets may be pressured on Thursday after Bed Bath & Beyond (BBBY) cut its per-share earnings guidance for the fiscal second quarter to 97 cents to $1.03. Wall Street has been expecting $1.08 a share. Shares were down 11% after hours to $65.55. The shares had fallen $1.05 to $73.67 in regular trading.
The guidance came after the company reported 89 cents a share in fiscal-first-quarter earnings, up 24% from a year ago and 4 cents better than expected. Revenue was up 5.1% to $2.22 billion.
Why the Fed didn't move further
The issue markets seemed to have with the Fed decision was this: Are conditions so bad that the central bank needs to bring really big guns to bear on the problem?
The conclusion one must take away from the Fed statement and Bernanke's news conference is "not yet." Yes, unemployment is at 8.2%. Yes, housing is still troubled, though showing signs of life, and, yes, Europe is a mess.
But the effects on the economy aren't clear, especially given that gasoline prices, probably the biggest drag on the economy this spring, have fallen more than 10% since early April.
If things do spin out of control, the Fed said it is "prepared to take further action as appropriate" to support the economy and keep inflation low. Bernanke repeated the statement several times during his news conference.
The Fed statement and Bernanke conceded that economic data early in the year led many, the Fed included, to believe an economic recovery with some strength had taken hold.
That's not the case, Bernanke said, and Fed governors and the presidents of the 12 Federal Reserve Banks cut their projections of growth, unemployment and even inflation from estimates they all made in April.
| Energy prices -- New York close | ||||||||||||
| Wed. | Tues. | Month chg. | YTD chg. | |||||||||
| Crude oil (-CL) | $81.45 | $84.35 | -5.87% | -17.59% | ||||||||
| (per barrel) | ||||||||||||
| Heating oil (-HO) | $2.5874 | $2.6351 | -4.28% | -11.21% | ||||||||
| (per gallon) | ||||||||||||
| Natural gas (-NG) | $2.5170 | $2.5450 | 3.92% | -15.79% | ||||||||
| (per mil. BTU) | ||||||||||||
| Unleaded gasoline (-RB) | $2.5073 | $2.5699 | -7.91% | -5.65% | ||||||||
| (per gallon) | ||||||||||||
| Brent crude | $92.69 | $95.76 | -9.01% | -13.68% | ||||||||
| (per barrel) | ||||||||||||
| Retail gasoline | $3.4870 | $3.4970 | -3.67% | 6.44% | ||||||||
| (per gallon; AAA) | ||||||||||||
Procter & Gamble weighs on the Dow; JPMorgan has some sizzle
Procter & Gamble (PG) shares were off $1.82 to $60.39 after the company warned that fiscal-fourth-quarter revenue and earnings would be lower than expected because of slower growth in Europe and China and a higher dollar.
P&G was the weakest performer among the 30 Dow stocks, subtracting more than 14 points from the blue-chip index.
JPMorgan Chase (JPM) was the Dow leader, up $1.74 to $36.45 on reports it has sold off most of its huge losing corporate credit position, which may result in a loss of several billion dollars. The gain added nearly 8 points to the Dow.
Sixteen of the 30 Dow stocks were higher, along with 191 S&P 500 stocks and 49 Nasdaq-100 stocks. The Dow crossed zero 48 times during the session.
Jabil Circuit (JBL) and J.C. Penney (JCP) were the S&P 500 leaders, up $1.33 to $20.75 and $1.24 to $23.49, respectively.
Pioneer Natural Resources (PXD) and health care information Cerner (CERN) were the laggards, down $4.32 to $86 and $3.40 to $83.51, respectively.
Check Point Software (CHKP) and DirecTV (DTV) were the Nasdaq-100 leaders, with Cerner and Research In Motion (RIMM) the laggards. RIM was lower on reports it is laying off workers in small batches.
Interest rates move up; oil and gold drop
Interest rates moved higher before the Fed announcement, dropped for a time but finished higher. The 10-year Treasury yield was at 1.642%, up very slightly from Tuesday's 1.62%. The euro had moved to as high as $1.27243 but fell back to $1.2663, down 0.289 cents from Tuesday.
Crude oil (-CL) settled down $2.90 to $81.45 a barrel in New York after the Energy Department reported larger-than-expected domestic supplies of crude and gasoline. Brent crude, the benchmark North Sea oil, was off $3.21 to $92.55 a barrel.
The national average price of gasoline dropped to $3.487 a gallon, down from Tuesday's $3.497 a gallon, according to AAA's Daily Fuel Gauge Report.
Gold (-GC) settled down $7.40 to $1,602.10 an ounce. Silver (-SI) was up 2.1 cents to $28.389. Copper (-HG) fell 4.6 cents to $3.3875 a pound.
| Short hits from the markets -- New York close | ||||||||||||
| Wed. | Tues. | Month chg. | YTD chg. | |||||||||
| Treasury yields | ||||||||||||
| 13-week Treasury bill | 0.0800% | 0.090% | 14.29% | 700.00% | ||||||||
| 5-year Treasury note | 0.744% | 0.701% | 10.88% | -10.36% | ||||||||
| 10-year Treasury note | 1.642% | 1.620% | 3.86% | -12.24% | ||||||||
| 30-year Treasury bond | 2.724% | 2.727% | 1.95% | -5.71% | ||||||||
| Currencies | ||||||||||||
| U.S. Dollar Index | 82.114 | 81.966 | -1.22% | 1.98% | ||||||||
| British pound | 1.5691 | 1.5731 | 1.80% | 0.99% | ||||||||
| (in U.S. $) | ||||||||||||
| U.S. $ in pounds | £0.637 | £0.636 | -1.77% | -0.98% | ||||||||
| Euro in dollars | $1.27 | $1.27 | 2.44% | -2.27% | ||||||||
| (in U.S. $) | ||||||||||||
| U.S. $ in euros | € 0.790 | € 0.788 | -2.39% | 2.32% | ||||||||
| U.S. $ in yen | 79.62 | 78.98 | 1.35% | 3.26% | ||||||||
| U.S. $ in Chinese | 6.38 | 6.35 | 0.03% | 0.91% | ||||||||
| yuan | ||||||||||||
| Canada dollar | $0.980 | $0.983 | 1.16% | -0.14% | ||||||||
| (in U.S. $) | ||||||||||||
| U.S. dollar | $1.021 | $1.017 | -1.15% | 0.13% | ||||||||
| (in Canadian $) | ||||||||||||
| Commodities | ||||||||||||
| Gold (-GC) | $1,615.80 | $1,623.20 | 3.30% | 3.13% | ||||||||
| (per troy ounce) | ||||||||||||
| Copper (-HG) | $3.388 | $3.434 | 0.65% | -1.41% | ||||||||
| (per pound) | ||||||||||||
| Silver (-SI) | $28.3890 | $28.3680 | 2.28% | 1.70% | ||||||||
| (per troy ounce) | ||||||||||||
| Wheat (-ZW) | $6.6400 | $6.4950 | 3.15% | 1.72% | ||||||||
| (per bushel) | ||||||||||||
| Corn (-ZC) | $5.6650 | $5.635 | 2.03% | -12.37% | ||||||||
| (per bushel) | ||||||||||||
| Cotton | $0.7174 | 0.7405 | -0.15% | -21.75% | ||||||||
| (per pound) | ||||||||||||
| Coffee | $1.5240 | 1.588 | -6.47% | -33.64% | ||||||||
| (per pound) | ||||||||||||
| Crude oil (-CL) | $81.45 | $84.35 | -5.87% | -17.59% | ||||||||
| (per barrel) | ||||||||||||
Gmyers
I agree 100% but, the House & Senate are dominated by one profession LAWYERS.
We need some way to have true representation in the House & Senate.
Obama Care is a great example of the House & Senate passing a bill that adds more burdens to Insurance companies, Doctors, Hospitals & employers. The plus side is more legal work for the Lawyers and a huge new bureacracy that will employ 10's of thousands on new government workers. Let's really expand the government.
What happened to the 3.7 trillion Wall Street loan the Fed gave the banks on top of the 800 billion TARP Funds. Lending is still tight and Wall Street was sitting on trillions before they got the unasked for .0003% loan.
The collaboaration between the Fed and Wall Street is criminal, banks giving .5% interest for our money for savings and investing our money in high interest instruments. We need a complete accounting of Fed activities and a Fed audit...
Ho Hum. The federal reserve, which is nothing more than a cartel of rich bankers, tried to affect the stock market with there bull.
We need to abolish the federal reserve and put something better in place. Any ideas what we could do?
The only real fix for this nation is to get the banks out of the money control for this nation. We the people had to bail these foolish bankers out.... Why do they think I'd believe anything they say?
I'm so sick of hearing how some rich fool lost is money is the stock market because personally I don't care.
Day traders sucking out the profits from the market....greed ! The 2nd Qtr. would be better for us long termers using it for retirement income someday if these greedy souls would leave it alone !!
Also the Corporations are flushed with money..... working existing workers to the bone and not hiring more employees that might effect their profit.
BTW... does it surprise anyone that the Dow turned South only after somebody told the addicts on Wall Street that the Fed window could be open one day but not today?
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[BRIEFING.COM] The major averages ended higher across the board as the S&P 500 advanced 0.8%.
Equities climbed steadily since the opening bell as investors prepared for tomorrow's policy decision from the Federal Reserve. Although chatter in recent weeks has included speculation the Fed would look to taper its asset purchases, today's broad gains suggest investors expect mostly reassuring words from Chairman Bernanke at tomorrow's press conference.
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