Market Updates
Oil Surges to $68
Elena
06 Apr, 2006
New York City
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Stock markets opened lower on inflation concerns, raised by surging oil prices and lower jobless claims. In addition, retailers generally disappointed with April sales reports. Wal-Mart, reported 1.4% same-store sales rise in March, the smallest increase in sales since April of 2005. Teen apparel retailers came under pressure, dragged by Abercrombie & Fitch, Pacific Sunwear and Hot Topic which posted flat to lower March same-store sales.
[R] 9:45AM Stocks opened lower on inflation concerns.[/R]
U.S. stocks opened in the negative on surging oil prices, decrease in jobless claims and generally weak same-store sales reports for April which dampened investors’ enthusiasm. Traders were also reluctant to make significant moves ahead of the release of the March employment report on Friday. The weakness in the markets was partly due to losses among airline stocks as rising oil prices raised concerns about higher fuel costs. The airline sector fell 1.4%. At the same time, the increase in the price of oil contributed to some strength among energy stocks. Gold and other metal stocks also advanced, benefiting from a continued increase in metal prices with the price of gold reaching a 25-year high above $600 an ounce. In the first hour of trading, the Dow Jones industrial average fell 17.21, or 0.15%. The Standard & Poor''s 500 index lost 2.55, or 0.19%, and the Nasdaq composite index dropped 3.14, or 0.13%. Bonds also fell, with the yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note rising to 4.87% from 4.84% late Wednesday.
[R]9:15AM Stock futures pointed to a flat opening.[/R]
U.S. stock index futures pointed to a flat start of the session, with investors cautious as retailers report March sales and before the release of employment data on Friday. Retail stocks will be in the spotlight on Thursday with a number of retailers releasing their March sales results. The quarterly sales reported to the present moment were generally disappointing as retailers cited colder weather and a later Easter. Wal-Mart ((WMT)), the world''s largest retailer, reported 1.4% same-store sales rise in March. The growth was slightly above the 1.3% growth predicted by the company, but was still the smallest increase in sales since April of 2005. The retailer projected stronger sales growth in April, forecasting same-store sales growth of 4 to 6%. Wal-Mart also reaffirmed its Q1 earning guidance of 58/62 cents per share. Among other retailers, Target ((TGT)) said same-store sales rose 2.2%, Costco Wholesale reported same-store sales increase of 7%. Teen apparel retailers came under pressure, dragged by Abercrombie & Fitch ((ANF)), Pacific Sunwear ((PSUN)), and Hot Topic ((HOTT)) which posted flat to lower March same-store sales. But other retailers, oriented to young customers continued to show strength, with Chico’s FAS Inc. reporting an 8.4% climb, Guess Inc. seeing an 8.1% increase and Wet Seal Inc. reporting a 16.2% jump. Comparable sales at Bebe Stores Inc. rose 4.1%.
Crude oil prices jumped above $67 on weaker domestic gasoline supplies. Light sweet crude May delivery rose 45 cents to $67.52 a barrel. Gasoline futures gained 3 cents to $1.98 a gallon, while heating oil added a penny to $1.8825. Natural gas climbed 7 cents to $7.140 per 1,000 cubic feet. London Brent climbed 58 cents to $67.68. European gold neared $600 per ounce, setting a new 25-year high as the rising oil prices increased the appeal of the precious metal. In London gold traded at $595.50 per troy ounce, up from $586.90. In Zurich the precious metal rose to $595.40 from $584.30. In Hong Kong gold rose $9 to 594.80. Silver climbed to $11.80 from $11.70. The U.S. dollar declined versus major currencies. The euro traded at $1.2319, up from $1.2291. The dollar bought 117.35, down from 117.36. The British pound was quoted at $1.7581, up from $1.7532.
Bebe Stores Inc, ((BEBE)), women''s apparel retailer, reported same-store sales in Q3 advanced 4.1% compared with the same period a year ago, beating analyst expectation of 1.5%. The company added that total sales climbed 12.3% and same-store sales for Q3 advanced 4.7%. Total sales for Q3 gained 13.2%.
Dress Barn Inc, ((DBRN)), specialty apparel retailer, reported that same-store sales in March advanced 2% from the same time the previous year, missing analyst estimate of a rise of 3%. The company added that total sales for the period ended April 1 rose 5%.
Pier 1 Imports Inc., ((PIR)), home furnishings retailer, reversed to a Q4 net loss of $9.98 million, or 11 cents a share, a decline from a net profit of $18.8 million in the year-ago period. Sales from continuing operations advanced 0.7%, but same-store sales declined 2.9%. The company announced that an accelerated program of store closures as well as corporate office restructuring led to charges of up to $9.8 million. Pier 1 also added it plans to reclassify its consolidated statements of cash flows for the years ending Feb. 26, 2005 and Feb. 28, 2004 to properly reflect the exchange of credit-card receivables for interests in securitized receivables.
RPM International Inc, ((RPM)), holding company for subsidiaries in specialty coatings, reported that its Q3 loss was narrower than the year-ago period on 19% higher sales. The loss came to 2 cents a share, from 4 cents in the year-ago period. If not for $15 million in pre-tax reserve charges for asbestos liability in both periods, RPM earned 6 cents against 4 cents, beating on that basis analyst estimate of a nickel a share.
American Greetings Corp, ((AM)), seasonal greeting cards producer, reported Q4 profit of 58 cents a share, up from 28 cents a share a year-ago boosted by a lower tax rate, even as it spent money to improve its greeting card business. A share repurchase also boosted per-share earnings.
[R] 8:15 AM European averages were mixed at mid-day.[/R]
European markets were mixed at mid-day dealings ahead of key interest-rate decisions in Europe. Policy makers at the Central European Bank and the Bank of England are expected to leave interest rates on hold, 4.5% in the U.K and 2.5% in the euro zone. The euro rose 0.2% against the dollar to trade at $1.2308, while the sterling gained 0.3% to $1.7575. Gains in the energy and tech sectors supported market sentiment with oil companies Royal Dutch Shell and Total moving higher, as well as tech firms SAP and ASML also pushing up. Auto stocks like DaimlerChrysler and Volkswagen fell in Germany after Credit Suisse downgraded the whole sector. The German DAX 30 edged down 0.3%, the French CAC 40 fell 0.2%, and London FTSE 100 added 0.1%.
[R]7:45AM Stocks in Japan and Hong Kong surged.[/R]
Asian-Pacific benchmarks advanced across the region, led by gains in high-tech stocks, following a strong performance of the tech sector in U.S. markets and a five-year high of the Nasdaq. The Nikkei rose 1.4% to 17,489.33 with semiconductors lifted by news that Toshiba will enter a joint venture with U.S. company ScanDisk to build a factory, producing NAND-type flash memory chips. Shares of Tokyo Electron rose 3%, while chip equipment maker Advantest climbed 3.7%. Shares of the biggest Asian retailing group Aeon also contributed to the general strength, rising 4% on record profit. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng climbed 1.93%, lifted by banking giant HSBC Holdings and wireless provider China Mobile. Australia’s All Ordinaries gained 0.6% on higher oil and metals prices, while South Korea’s Kospi gained 0.6% on semiconductors.
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