Market Updates

Spending and Income Slightly up

Elena
30 Jun, 2006
New York City

    Stock futures were pointing to some caution early Friday morning, following one of the biggest rallies in recent time, sparked by the Fed''s policy statement on interest rates. The Commerce Department released a report, showing that both personal income and personal spending rose 0.4% in May after an upwardly revised increase of 0.7% in April.

[R]9:00AM Stocks futures pointed near the flat line.[/R]
U.S. stock futures were indicating some caution early Friday morning, following one of the biggest rallies in recent time, powered by the Fed's policy statement on interest rates. The Dow climbed more than 200 points and the Nasdaq surged 3% advance. On Thursday the Federal Reserve announced its decision to raise interest rates by a quarter point for the seventeenth consecutive time. On the economic outlook, the Fed said that U.S. economic growth is moderating from the strong pace seen earlier in the year, adding that inflation expectations remain contained due in part to ongoing productivity gains. Of companies in focus, Apple ((AAPL)) said it started an investigation of executive stock options granted over a 4-year period, including a grant to Chief Executive Steve Jobs. Shares of Palm ((PALM)) may decline after posting strong Q4 profit growth but forecast Q1 earnings and revenue below analyst estimates. Research In Motion ((RIMM)) is expected to rise after posting a 35% sales increase, meeting analyst expectations on top-line growth. On the deal front, RSA Security ((RSAS)) agreed to be bought for $2.1 billion in cash by EMC Corp. Dow Jones futures were recently 13 points lower, S&P 500 futures dropped 1.5 points, and Nasdaq futures dropped 5 points


[R]Personal income and spending moderately advanced.[/R]
The Commerce Department said that personal income rose 0.4 percent in May following an upwardly revised increase of 0.7 percent in April. Economists had expected personal income to increase 0.2 percent compared to the 0.5 percent increase originally reported for the previous month. The report also showed that personal spending increase by 0.4 percent in May after rising by an upwardly revised 0.7 percent in April. Personal spending was expected to increase by 0.4 percent compared to the 0.6 percent increase originally reported for April. Additionally, the Commerce Department said that its reading on consumer prices rose at an annual rate of 3.3 percent in May compared to the 2.9 percent increase seen in April. Excluding food and energy prices, consumer prices rose 2.1 percent year-over-year, unchanged from the previous month.

AZZ Inc., ((AZZ)), maker of electrical products, reported Q1 earnings of 71 cents a share, up from a profit of 38 cents a share a year-ago on 17% revenue growth The company said its backlog jumped 42% to $92.1 million as of May 31. AZZ lifted its outlook for fiscal 2006 to earnings of $1.85 to $1.95 a share.

IMI Plc, ((IMI)), U.K. engineering group, announced that it expects first-half profit before restructuring costs and amortization to be in the range of 84 million pounds to 87 million pounds ($153 million to $158 million), higher than 69.6 million pounds last year. IMI also said that restructuring costs will increase to around 7 million pounds from 2.2 million pounds, in part because of the relocation of some if its U.S. fluid power operation. The company added that trading in its fluid control and indoor climate units has been strong, but its retail and beverage dispensing units have performed worse than last year

Hooper Holmes, ((HH)), risk assessment services company, reported Q1 net loss of 2 cents a share, down vs. earnings of 3 cents a share a year-ago. If not for non-recurring items, the loss would have been 1 cent a share, matching the analyst estimate. Revenue for Q1 dropped to $76.8 million from last year's $82 million, as weakness in its core paramedical business led to a decline in revenue at its Health Information Division.


[R]8:00AM BP Apple admits possible stock options could be mishandled.[/R]
Apple Computer Inc. acknowledged that some stock options awarded to employees might have been mishandled, a problem threatening to raise questions about the accuracy of past financial statements. The maker of personal computers and the iPod music player said that its own internal investigation had uncovered ‘irregularities’ in employee stock options issued between 1997 and 2001.

Apple said it had hired an outside lawyer to lead an investigation into its past stock options and had also notified the Securities and Exchange Commission of the problem. Subsequently, the SEC launched its own inquiry after other companies raised a red flag about their past stock options. Nearly half of the 57 companies that have disclosed stock option trouble are based in Silicon Valley and other parts of the San Francisco Bay area.

Most of the stock option investigations so far have revolved around a practice known as ‘backdating.’ Stock options become more valuable as the market price rises above the exercise price, so backdating fattens the recipient''s profit. Backdating stock options isn''t necessarily illegal, but it can cause a company to deduct employee compensation expenses improperly that could exaggerate profits and result in an underpayment of taxes. Apple didn''t say whether its stock option trouble involved backdating.


[R]7:30 AM Asian stocks rally in the wake of Fed’s decision on rates.[/R]
Asian markets finished higher on Friday. In Tokyo, the blue-chip Nikkei 225 index advanced 2.54% to settle at 15505.18. Auto stocks led the way, as Nissan Motor and Mazda Motor both surged 5% and Toyota Motor gained 4.18%. Oil-sector stocks were also buoyed as crude-oil prices advanced. Inpex Holdings soared 6.8% and Nippon Oil gained 2.8%. Hong Kong''s Hang Seng Index advanced 2.54% to16267.62. Cheung Kong Holdings advanced 3.7%, while Sun Hung Kai Properties climbed 2.6%. Sino Land rose 7.4% and Hang Lung Properties added 6.11%. In Seoul, the Korea Composite Stock Price Index, or Kospi, setttled up 2.5% at 1295.15. Financial shares bounced back, leading the gainers in the broader market. Kookmin Bank surged 3.9%, Hana Financial Group rose 3% and Industrial Bank of Korea jumped 4.6%. The Weighted Price Index of the Taiwan Stock Exchange gained 1.5% to 6704.41, while Sydney''s S&P/ASX200 index rose 1.53% to 5037.9.


[R]6:30 AM European stocks surge after Fed’s dovish statement.[/R]
European markets traded higher on Friday. The U.K. FTSE 100 index gained 1% at 5,851, the German DAX Xetra 30 index advanced 1.4% at 5,658, the French CAC-40 index rose 1.3% at 4,941. The advance was broad-based, but energy stocks were among the leaders after strong gains for their US peers as crude prices advanced above $73 a barrel, closing in on the $75.35 record set in April. Norway’s Statoil gained 2.5%, while France’s Total added 1.5% and Finnish refiner Neste Oil climbed 2.1% . Top gainers also included technology companies including Ericsson, up 2.1%, and automakers such as Renault, 1.3% higher. European movers included Germany''s Siemens and Bayer after they struck a deal over Bayer''s diagnostics division. Industrial conglomerate Siemens gained 1% after it announced late Thursday that it has agreed to buy Bayer''s diagnostics unit for 4.2 billion euros in an effort to expand its healthcare equipment and services business. Bayer shares surged 4.1% after the news.

Light sweet crude oil for August delivery gained 18 cents to $73.70 a barrel, while Brent crude futures on the ICE Futures exchange in London advanced 11 cents to $73.11 a barrel. Gold advanced to a two-week high of $602.30 an ounce before easing to $600.10/600.80 by mid-morning trading, up from $592.00/594.00 late in New York on Thursday. The dollar extended losses across the board after the Fed''s latest policy statement signaled a pause in the central bank''s long monetary-tightening campaign. The euro bought $1.2702 in morning European trading, up from $1.2644 in New York late Thursday. The British pound climbed to $1.8330 from $1.8260. The dollar also fell Friday against the Japanese currency, slipping to 114.74 yen from 115.26 yen.

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