
Dow gains 19 in pre-election trading
The major indexes move ahead in afternoon trading. Apple rises after selling 3 million iPads over the weekend. Crude oil and gold move higher. Investment bank KBW agrees to merge with Stifel Financial. Toyota profits jump.
Updated: 7:56 p.m. ETStocks closed with small gains today, the last full session before Election Day. It was a day of low volume as many investors and traders began to hunker down, awaiting election returns.
There was some strength in technology shares, in part because Apple (AAPL) said it sold 3 million iPad tablet devices over the weekend -- a possible signal of a strong holiday season. Apple finished up $7.82 to $584.62; the shares had reached as high as $587.77.
Housing stocks were higher, although there was no news. But investors appear to be betting that the rebound in housing activity that began this year will continue in 2013 regardless of who wins the presidential election on Tuesday.
Gold (-GC) settled up $8 to $1,683.29 an ounce, and crude oil (-CL) in New York closed at $85.65 a barrel, up 79 cents. Brent crude, which many traders believe is a better measure of global demand, also was higher.
The Dow Jones industrials ($INDU) closed up 19 points to 13,112. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index ($INX) gained 3 points to 1,417, and the Nasdaq Composite Index ($COMPX) climbed 18 points to just under 3,000. The modest gains came after a strong rally on Thursday and a drubbing on Friday that saw the Dow fall 139 points.
Article continues below.The Nasdaq-100 Index ($NDX) was up 17 points to 2,673, with 61 stocks in the index showing gains.
The calm before . . .
The day before Election Day is usually fairly quiet -- even in November 2008, when the Dow and S&P 500 closed slightly lower on the Monday before the election. The Nasdaq had a small gain that day. On Election Day itself, the Dow jumped more than 300 points -- and fell more than 800 in the two days after then-Sen. Barack Obama defeated Sen. John McCain.
On Nov. 6, 2000, the day before the George W. Bush/Al Gore election, the Dow was up 135 points, with the S&P 500 up 6 points. The Nasdaq, however, fell 35 points. Once the reality hit that the Florida election count would end up in the courts, the market fell back sharply.
Most polls suggest an extremely close result, with Obama expected to defeat former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney and Democrats maintaining control of the U.S. Senate. The House of Representatives is likely to remain in Republican control.
Intrade.com, the Irish betting site, and the Iowa Electronics Markets site, run by the University of Iowa College of Business, see the odds of an Obama win at better than 67%. Both see narrow victory margins for the president.
The markets are, of course, open on Tuesday. (Actually, until 1982, stocks didn't trade on Election Day.) Earnings are due from News Corp. (NWSA), Fossil (FOSL) and Prudential Financial (PRU).
Futures trading suggests a modestly lower open.
| Energy prices -- New York close | ||||||||||||
| Mon. | Fri. | Month chg. | YTD chg. | |||||||||
| Crude oil (-CL) | $85.65 | $84.86 | -0.68% | -13.34% | ||||||||
| (per barrel) | ||||||||||||
| Heating oil (-HO) | $2.9829 | $2.9474 | -2.59% | 2.36% | ||||||||
| (per gallon) | ||||||||||||
| Natural gas (-NG) | $3.5540 | $3.5540 | -3.74% | 18.90% | ||||||||
| (per mil. BTU) | ||||||||||||
| Unleaded gasoline (-RB) | $2.6202 | $2.5736 | -0.38% | -1.40% | ||||||||
| (per gallon) | ||||||||||||
| Brent crude | $107.73 | $105.68 | 1.94% | 0.33% | ||||||||
| (per barrel) | ||||||||||||
| Retail gasoline | $3.4700 | $3.4750 | -1.45% | 5.92% | ||||||||
| (per gallon; AAA) | ||||||||||||
ISM non-manufacturing index slips
In the day's one big economic report, the Institute for Supply Management’s non-manufacturing index declined to 54.2 last month from 55.1 in September.
Economists projected 54.5. Readings above 50 signal expansion in the gauge of industries that account for almost 90% of the economy.
Sales and new orders slowed. But a measure of employment rose, indicating services firms hired more.
The report measures growth in a broad range of businesses from retail and construction companies to health care and financial services firms. The industries covered employ about 90% of the workforce.
A gauge of hiring rose to a seven-month high of 54.9. The government said Friday that services firms added 163,000 net jobs in October. It was the best showing since February and represented 95% of the jobs created last month.
Netflix (NFLX) shares were up $1.34 to $78.24 after it announced it is protecting itself against hostile takeovers, less than a week after activist investor Carl Icahn disclosed a stake of nearly 10% in the online video company.
The company said today it has adopted a shareholder rights plan, also known as a poison pill. A poison pill is designed to make it difficult or even impossible for someone to take over the company without an agreement from the board. When the provision is triggered, additional shares flood the market and make it prohibitively expensive for a takeover.
In a Securities and Exchange Commission filing, Icahn called Netflix's poison pill "an example of poor corporate governance" because the company didn't seek a shareholder vote.
KBW (KBW) jumped $1.7 to $17.47. The investment banking firm, which has specialized on the business in the financial services sectors, agreed to merge with Stifel Financial (SF) in a cash-and-stock deal valued at $575 million. Stifel rose 67 cents to $32.58.
FuelCell Energy (FCEL) climbed 12 cents to $1.03. The U.S. manufacturer of fuel-cell power plants announced its biggest order to date. Posco, South Korea’s largest steelmaker, agreed to pay about $181 million for 121.8 megawatts of power plants and services beginning in May, FuelCell said today in a statement.
Transocean (RIG) climbed $2.58 to $48.64. The world’s largest offshore rig contractor posted adjusted third-quarter earnings that exceeded estimates on improved cost control.
Time Warner Cable (TWC) slumped $6.24 to $91.93. It lost 140,000 video subscribers, more than the 128,000 that analysts had estimated. Time Warner Cable has become “top-heavy” after shares gained more than 54%, Todd Mitchell, an analyst at Brean Capital, told Bloomberg News. Its operations also aren’t as strong as those of industry leader Comcast (CMCSA).
Radian Group (RDN) tumbled 55 cents to $4.83 after Barron’s said the mortgage insurer may eventually incur costs for claims that it denied.
Toyota's big rebound sends shares higher
Toyota Motor (TM) saw profits more than triple in the third quarter, as the company rebounded in a big way from the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami in Japan. The disaster crippled Toyota’s supply chain, and kept it from supplying dealers with new cars.
The company is still getting hurt by the strong yen, but has been able to take back market share that it lost in the U.S. after the earthquake. Toyota sold 1.26 million units in the U.S., versus 572,000 a year ago. Shares in New York rose $3.55 to $81.35.
The market sees modest gains
Seventeen of the 30 Dow stocks were higher, and a majority of shares in the S&P 500 and Nasdaq-100 indexes were up as well.
The Dow Jones Transportation Average ($DJT), watched closely as a leading indicator for the economy, was up 14 points to 5,124. The index was up 0.3% last week and is up 4.7% for the quarter.
Energy stocks, materials stocks (especially steel stocks) and tech shares were the leading sectors. Utilities and telecom shares were weaker.
Hewlett-Packard (HPQ), Caterpillar (CAT) and Walt Disney (DIS) were the Dow leaders. United Health (UNH) and Bank of America (BAC) were the laggards.
E*Trade Financial (ETFC), oil services company Cameron International (CAM) and chip-maker NVidia (NVDA) were the S&P 500 leaders. Wynn Resorts (WYNN), Time Warner Cable and Pall (PLL) were the laggards.
Nvidia, Flextronics (FLEX) and Texas Instruments (TXN) were the top Nasdaq-100 stocks. Sirius XM Radio (SIRI), Green Mountain Coffee Roasters (GMCR) and pharmaceutical company Warner Chilcott (WCRX) were the laggards.
| Short hits from the markets -- New York close | ||||||||||||
| Mon. | Fri. | Month chg. | YTD chg. | |||||||||
| Treasury yields | ||||||||||||
| 13-week Treasury bill | 0.0900% | 0.090% | -18.18% | 800.00% | ||||||||
| 5-year Treasury note | 0.699% | 0.728% | -2.24% | -15.78% | ||||||||
| 10-year Treasury note | 1.684% | 1.726% | -0.12% | -9.99% | ||||||||
| 30-year Treasury bond | 2.871% | 2.917% | 0.70% | -0.62% | ||||||||
| Currencies | ||||||||||||
| U.S. Dollar Index | 80.843 | 80.683 | 1.07% | 0.40% | ||||||||
| British pound | 1.5972 | 1.6026 | -1.02% | 2.80% | ||||||||
| (in U.S. $) | ||||||||||||
| U.S. $ in pounds | £0.626 | £0.624 | 1.03% | -2.72% | ||||||||
| Euro in dollars | $1.28 | $1.28 | -1.36% | -1.32% | ||||||||
| (in U.S. $) | ||||||||||||
| U.S. $ in euros | € 0.782 | € 0.780 | 1.37% | 1.33% | ||||||||
| U.S. $ in yen | 80.39 | 80.52 | 0.73% | 4.26% | ||||||||
| U.S. $ in Chinese | 6.27 | 6.24 | 0.56% | -0.90% | ||||||||
| yuan | ||||||||||||
| Canada dollar | $1.005 | $1.005 | 0.43% | 2.40% | ||||||||
| (in U.S. $) | ||||||||||||
| U.S. dollar | $0.996 | $0.995 | -0.35% | -2.34% | ||||||||
| (in Canadian $) | ||||||||||||
| Commodities | ||||||||||||
| Gold (-GC) | $1,683.20 | $1,675.200 | -2.09% | 7.43% | ||||||||
| (per troy ounce) | ||||||||||||
| Copper (-HG) | $3.470 | $3.482 | -1.35% | 0.99% | ||||||||
| (per pound) | ||||||||||||
| Silver (-SI) | $31.1280 | $30.857 | -3.68% | 11.51% | ||||||||
| (per troy ounce) | ||||||||||||
| Wheat (-ZW) | $8.6600 | $8.645 | 0.17% | 32.67% | ||||||||
| (per bushel) | ||||||||||||
| Corn (-ZC) | $7.3550 | $7.395 | -2.68% | 13.77% | ||||||||
| (per bushel) | ||||||||||||
| Cotton | $0.7040 | $0.7035 | 0.47% | -23.21% | ||||||||
| (per pound) | ||||||||||||
| Coffee | $1.5090 | $1.547 | -2.42% | -34.29% | ||||||||
| (per pound) | ||||||||||||
| Crude oil (-CL) | $85.65 | $84.860 | -0.68% | -13.34% | ||||||||
| (per barrel) | ||||||||||||
And before you vote, please take a minute to seriously contemplate your choice. Don't choose someone just because they are a member of a certain political party. Don't make your choice just based on how someone looks or sounds. Don't base your vote on a commercial or soundbite or slogan. And most of all, don't choose someone just because they aren't the other guy. Make your choice based on who you truly believe is the best person to lead us for the next 4 years. Vote your principles, vote your values and vote your conscience, even if it means casting your vote for a 3rd party candidate. If you aren't happy with the 2-party establishment, there's no better way to voice your displeasure than by voting for somebody else.
A more likely scenario - Romney wins by a narrow margin (more than likely) and Obama & Dems take to the courts to contest the election. It's mentioned only as a brief statement above but this could be a very real outcome. And the markets don't like uncertainty like this at all. Get ready for more polarization of our country from Obama and the poor loser Dems the next few day's.
ROMNEY/RYAN 2012 !!
Will Obama protect our Diplomats and Service People??? I doubt it!
Here’s CBS’ latest release on Benghazi, NOT FROM FOX;
"CBS News has released a clip of an interview by Steve Kroft of 60 Minutes on Sep. 12 with President Barack Obama that indicates Obama knew the assault on the U.S. consulate in Benghazi, Libya was a premeditated terror attack–and suggests the White House later deceived the public by blaming protests against an anti-Islam video. CBS chose not to air the clip for over a month–but did air Obama’s attack on Romney that same night."
"CBS News has learned that during the Sept. 11 attack on the U.S. Mission in Benghazi, the Obama Administration did not convene its top interagency counterterrorism resource: the Counterterrorism Security Group, (CSG).
The CSG is the one group that’s supposed to know what resources every agency has. They know of multiple options and have the ability to coordinate counterterrorism assets across all the agencies,” a high-ranking government official told CBS News. “They were not allowed to do their job. They were not called upon.“
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[BRIEFING.COM] The S&P 500 ended this week with a bang, roaring to a new all-time high on the back of stronger-than-expected economic data, influential leadership, and an ongoing appreciation for the Fed's monetary policy support.
The bullish bias was evident in premarket action as the S&P futures pointed to a higher start without the benefit of any definitive news catalyst. Stocks indeed benefited from a blast of buying interest at the opening bell on this ... More
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