Market Updates

World Markets Rise, Gasoline Gains

123jump.com Staff
08 Mar, 2007
New York City

    Strength in commodity producers lifted stocks in Asia and Europe, which in turn provided momentum to U.S. markets. Retailers turned in a tepid February same store sales after cold weather hit parts of the U.S. Labor Department said new unemployment claims fell by 10,000 to a seasonally adjusted 328,000 in the week ended March 3, slightly better than Wall Street expectations. Wal-Mart fell on weaker than expected same store sales but Nordstrom rose 5% on the data.

[R]4:30PM NY; 10:30PM Frankfurt; 3:00AM Mumbai - GLOBAL MARKETS[/R]
The European Central Bank raised interest rates by a quarter percentage point and the Bank of England left the rates unchanged. In the U.S. weekly report on gasoline showed less than expected rise in gasoline supply sparking another rally in gasoline prices. Asian Markets shrugged off recent weakness led by a rise of 3.7% in India.

Yield on 10-year bond closed at 4.525% and the 30-year bond closed at 4.662%.

Gold declined 10 cents to close at $652.800 a troy ounce, silver decreased 5 cents to end at $13.055 a troy ounce and copper advanced $165.000 to close at $6137.000 per ton.

Oil declined 19 cents to close at $61.630 a barrel and heating oil lost 0.590 cents to finish at 176.150 cents a gallon. Natural gas decreased 11.0 cents to close at $7.256 per MMBtu. Gasoline went up 3.000 cents to end at 192.550 cents a gallon.

Asian markets closed higher with investors shrugging off a weaker ending on Wall Street to focus on domestic-consumption-related issues amid optimism over the regional growth outlook. The advancers were led by India with a gain of 3.73%, Malaysia with an increase of 2.82% and Singapore with an advance of 2.07%. The only decliner was Philippines with a loss of 1.14%. Australia lost 0.06%.

European markets finished higher helped by gains from commodity producers and a batch of mostly well-received earnings from companies such as Dutch insurer Aegon and French utility Suez. The advancers were led by Norway with an increase of 2.41%, Spain with a gain of 2.02% and Belgium with an advance of 1.59%. There were no decliners.

Latin America markets finished higher rallied across the board as other emerging markets increasingly showed signs of recovery. The advancers were led by Argentina with an increase of 2.00%, Mexico with a gain of 1.88% and Brazil with an advance of 1.49%. There were no decliners. Canada gained 0.52% led by the key resource and financials sectors.

[R]2:30PM NY, U.S. Market Movers[/R]

California Coastal Communities ((CALC)) was upgraded to market outperform from market perform at JMP Securities. Shares of the company rose 8.1%.

CSP Inc. ((CSPI)), which develops messaging and image-processing software, shares rose 16.9% after the company said that its fiscal first-quarter revenue surged 40% and it reported a profit of $978,000, or 25 cents a share. Last year''s losses came to 15 cents a share.

Culp Inc. ((CFI)) said its third quarter net loss widened slightly to $2.2 million from $2.17 million. The company''s loss per share for the quarter was unchanged at 19 cents a share. Quarterly net sales fell to $55.7 million from $61 million in the same period a year earlier.

Fred''s Inc. ((FRED)), which operates discount general merchandise stores, said February sales at stores open for at least a year rose 3.9%, helped by its performance in general merchandise departments. The company said total sales for the four-week period ended March 3 rose 8% to $143.9 million, from $133.4 million in the four-week period ended Feb. 25, 2006. Fred''s planned to open about 40 new stores, 15 to 25 new pharmacies and close certain stores in 2007. Shares climbed 7.7%.

K2 Inc. ((KTO)), sporting goods maker, said it swung to a profit of 20 cents per share compared with a loss of $5.01 per share in the prior-year period. Adjusted income for the quarter totaled 25 cents per share. A 9% sales rise fueled the profit swing. The company credited new products such as alpine skis and high performance baseball gloves for the increase. Shares climbed 5.1%.

La Jolla Pharmaceutical Co. ((LJPC)) shares soared 29.4% after it reported positive interim results from a late-phase study of a drug proposed to treat lupus, a chronic condition in which the immune system mistakenly attacks the body''s own tissues.

Mama.com ((MAMA)) jumped 27.1% after the Canadian search engine swung to a fourth-quarter profit of $420,000, or 3 cents per share, compared with a loss of 6 cents per share a year ago. Revenue more than doubled to $3.6 million.

New York & Co. ((NWY)), women''s clothing-store chain, said February sales gained 8.9% to $87.7 million. Same-store sales were up 2.7%, as compared with last year''s 12.8% decline. Shares jumped 14.7%.

Omni Energy Services Corp. ((OMNI)), which provides seismic data to the petroleum industry, forecast 2007 net income to rise as much as 70%, as the company benefits from recent acquisitions. Shares climbed 12.5%.

Distributed Energy Systems Corp. ((DESC)), alternative-energy related company, said that its fourth-quarter net loss widened to $33.2 million, or 84 cents per share, compared to a net loss of $3.4 million, or 9 cents per share, in the year-ago period. The 2006 fourth-quarter included $25.6 million, or 65 cents per share, in non-cash goodwill and intangible asset impairment charges. Revenue climbed to $13.8 million versus $11 million in the same period a year earlier. Shares fell 27.2%.

[R]1:00PM NY European markets closed higher helped by commodities and earnings.[/R]
European stocks posed solid gains on Thursday, boosted by strength in the commodity sector and a batch of well received earnings reports. The gains came after the European Central Bank raised its key rate to 3.75%, in line with expectations, and the Bank of England held rates unchanged at 5.25%. Metals firms including Boliden and Xstrata made the best sector performance as copper and gold futures advanced. Among earnings-related gainers, French utilities Suez and Veolia Environnement jumped over 2% after reporting strong profit in 2006. Shares in BNP Paribas and Deutsche Bank both gained 2.4% following an upgrade at J.P. Morgan, which lifted its rating on the European investment banking sector as a whole to neutral from underweight. German pharmaceutical and chemicals giant Bayer and Anglo Irish Bank were also in the spotlight. Bayer benefited from an upgrade to buy from neutral at UBS, while Aegon climbed on higher profit. The German DAX Xetra 30 climbed 1.4% at 6,713.23, the French CAC 40 rose 1.3% to 5,524.26, and the U.K. FTSE 100 closed up 1.2% to 6,227.70.

Crude oil prices reversed from steep advance in the previous session, due to profit-taking. Light, sweet crude April delivery fell 52 cents $61.30. Heating oil slipped to $1.7642. Natural gas fell 15 cents to $7.220 per 1,000 cubic feet. London Brent dropped 64 cents to $61.86. The U.S. dollar gained ground against its major currency rivals. The euro was quoted at $1.3118, down from $1.3182. The dollar bought 117.42 yen, up from 116.36. The British pound was quoted at $1.9281, down from $1.9339. European gold prices rose. In London gold traded at $651.20 per troy ounce, up from $647.50. In Zurich, the precious metal traded at $650.40, down from $648.60. Silver rose to $12.97, up from $12.94.


[R]11:30AM Stock averages traded firmly in the positive, helped by global gains.[/R]
Wall Street rallied on Thursday, cheered by signals that weakness across global stock exchanges had been overcome. The Dow Jones industrials rose more than 100 points, boosted by General Motors ((GM)), up 1.9% and Citigroup ((C)), rising 1.2%. Retail stocks were in focus, with Nordstrom ((JWN)) leading the sector higher after reporting strong same-store sales growth in February. The stock rose 5.2%. Kohl''s Corp. ((KSS)) gained 2.7% after its sales handily beat the 2.9% gain estimate with an increase of 4.4%. Federated Department Stores ((FD)) rose 2.3% although its sales rose less than expected. Fast food giant McDonald''s ((MCD)) gained 1.6% after it reported a 5.7% gain in global comparable store sales.

Various sectors posted gains as strength in the overseas markets generated broad based buying interest. Brokerage stocks posted some particularly strong gain. Lehman Brothers ((LEH)) climbed 2.9%, Bear Stearns ((BRC)) rose 1.4%, and Goldman Sachs ((GS)) gained 2.9%. The companies are all expected to report quarterly earnings growth. Semiconductor stocks showed significant strength after Morgan Stanley upgraded its rating on the sector, due to expectations that fundamentals will progressively improve through 2008. In late morning trading, the Dow Jones industrial average rose 84.03, or 0.69%, to 12,276.48. The Standard & Poor''s 500 index climbed 12.19, or 0.88%, to 1,404.16, and the Nasdaq composite index advanced 23.25, or 0.98%, to 2,397.89. Bonds fell as stocks advanced; the yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note rose to 4.52% from 4.50% late Wednesday


[R]9:45AM U.S. stock markets opened little changed, looking for direction.[/R]
Wall Street advanced sharply Thursday, receiving a lift from recovering global markets and looking past lackluster retail sales reports for February. A strengthening U.S. dollar also contributed to the gains. Retailers posting disappointing results included Wal-Mart, Costco Wholesale, Limited Brands and others. Wal-Mart ((WMT)) lost 0.5% in early trading. The company also lifted its dividend by 31%. Limited Brands ((LTD)) shares advanced 1.2%, while Costco ((COST)) traded down 0.5%. However, Nordstrom''s and Target Corp''s same-store sales beat estimates. Nordstrom ((JWN)) rose 4.8% after it reported a 9.1% jump in same-store sales in February, beating the 5.7% estimate. Target ((TGT)) gained 2.1%.

The Dow Jones Industrial average was supported by 27 of its 30 stocks, with General Motors ((GM)) rising 1.8% and Citigroup ((C)) morning up 1.9%. Dow component Ford Motor ((F)) also helped blue-chip stocks, moving up 4.2% after its stock was upgraded to neutral from underperform at CSFB. Among other companies driven by analyst comments, AT&T ((T)) gained 2% after A.G. Edwards upgraded its stock to buy from hold, due to valuation concerns. Likewise, Barnes & Noble ((BKS)) rose 2.7% on brokerage upgrade. In the first hour of trading, the Dow Jones industrial average rose 72.98, or 0.60%, to 12,265.43. The Standard & Poor''s 500 index climbed 10.73, or 0.77%, to 1,402.70, and the Nasdaq composite index advanced 17.46, or 0.74%, to 2,392.10. Bonds fell as stocks rose; the yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note rose to 4.52% from 4.50% late Wednesday.


[R]9:30AM London advanced in morning trade Thursday on strong miners.[/R]
The UK market was higher in early trade in London. The FTSE 100 advance 43.1 points to 6,199.6 by late morning.

Economic news

The cost of borrowing was not changed and stayed at 5.25% on Thursday, a signal that the Bank of England is ready to wait and see how successful previous interest rate hikes have been in cooling the economy. The decision of the Bank was not surprising given recent mixed data. In addition, turmoil in global equity and currency markets over the past week had made it less likely that the monetary policy committee at the Bank would want to risk delivering a surprise hike to an already nervous market.

Advancers

The Kazakhmys led the gainers in the sector surging 3.7% after it made its first steps into the petroleum sector with the purchase of Dostan-Temir, which holds the right to sign the contract to explore for oil and gas in the East Akzhar region to the west of the country. Other miners tracked Kazakhmys and advanced. Vedanta Resources rose 3.5% and Lonmin gained 2.8%.

Profits, topping forecasts, from insurer Royal & Sun Alliance sent the company 1.9 %. RSA reported profits to 780 million pounds, raised its final dividend by 35 % and unveiled a new policy to match that rise in 2007. Drax Group was broadly flat after the power generator reported a 144 % rise in pre-exceptional earnings of 583 million pounds.

Of the mid-caps, Temporary power supplier Aggreko posted a 47.5% hike in full year pre-tax profit Thursday and added it expects to achieve a material increase in profits this year and to be ahead of current market expectations. The stocks advanced 7.1%.

Decliners

British American Tobacco led the decliner amongst the large-caps, down 1.3%. Property stocks also retreated after a strong performance in the previous session. Slough Estates lost 1.1% while Hammerson slipped 0.7%.


[R]9:00AM U.S. stock futures pointed higher on strengthening dollar.[/R]
U.S. stock futures advanced on Thursday, boosted by solid gains in overseas markets and strength in the U.S. dollar vs. the Japanese yen. The dollar rose 1.2% at 116.97 yen. Sluggish retailer sales in February and a rate hike from the European Central Bank failed to hurt the upside trend. Some of the largest nation''s chain stores reported sales results for February, with the overall performance expected to be tepid after cold weather hit parts of the U.S. Among pre-market highlights, Hollis-Eden Pharmaceuticals ((HEPH)) fell 21% as U.S. Dept. of Health found its Neumune drug ''technically unacceptable’.

Among companies releasing quarterly results, warehouse retailer Costco Wholesale ((COST)) posted a Q2 profit decline of 16%, blaming faster growing costs. Net income for the quarter dipped to 54 cents per share from 62 cents per share, but excluding special items, Q2 income would have been 66 cents per share. Revenue increased 7.5% to $15.1 billion from $14.06 billion a year earlier. On average, analysts predicted a quarterly profit of 66 cents per share and sales of $15.48 billion. Hovnanian Enterprises ((HOV)), home builder, is due to report earnings. On the economic news front, initial jobless claims totaled 328,000 last week, the lowest level in a month and down a better-than-expected 10,000 from the previous week. S&P 500 futures rose 10.40 points to 1,403.60 and Nasdaq 100 futures improved 20.50 points to 1,758.00. Dow industrial futures climbed 59 points to 12,260.

[R]Initial jobless claims dropped 10,000.[/R]
Thursday morning, the Department of Labor released its report on initial jobless claims in the week ended March 4, showing that jobless claims fell more than economists had been expecting. The decrease may generate some optimism about the strength of the February employment report. The report showed that initial jobless claims fell by 10,000 to 328,000 from the previous week''s unrevised figure of 338,000. Economists had been expecting a much more modest decline to about 335,000. At the same time, the Labor Department said that the less volatile four-week moving average rose to 339,000 from the previous week''s unrevised average of 335,250. With the increase, the moving average rose to its highest reading since the week ended October 29, 2005. The report also showed that continuing claims fell to 2.526 million in the week ended February 24 from the preceding week''s revised level of 2.624 million. As mentioned above, the Labor Department is scheduled to release its report on employment in the month of February on Friday. Economists currently expect the report to show that the economy added around 100,000 jobs during the month. On Wednesday, a report from Automatic Data Processing, Inc. showed that private non-farm employment grew a modest 57,000 in February following an increase of 121,000 in January. Economists had been expecting employment to increase by about 100,000.


[R]8:15AM U.S. Retailer posted disappointing March same-store sales.[/R]
U.S. largest chain stores started reporting sluggish same-store sales amid rough and choppy shopping in February. Unseasonably cold weather in February dampened lightweight apparel sales. Wal-Mart Stores Inc. ((WMT)) said Thursday its February same-store sales rose 0.9%, missing estimates of an increase by 1.5%. Total company sales for the four weeks ended March 2 rose 8.1% to $26.79 billion. The retailer projected March same-store sales are to rise between 1% and 2%.

Warehouse retailer Costco Wholesale ((COST)) reported 4% in its February same-store sales, missing the average analyst estimate of 5.1% growth.

Limited Brands Inc. ((LTD)) said Thursday its February same-store sales rose 3%, coming shy of analyst estimates of same-store sales increase by 4%. Net sales for the four weeks ended March 3 rose to $730.5 million from $635.8 million.

Federated Department Stores ((FD)) said same-store sales for February rose 1.2%, below its previous forecast of a 2% to 3% rise.

Bebe Stores ((BEBE)) posted a 2.2% decline in same-store sales, its first monthly decline in 46 months, down from expectations of a 2.2% gain.

The Gap ((GPS)) said same-store sales fell 4% in February, beating estimates of a drop of 4.8% for the month. Total sales for the four weeks ended March 3 slumped 5% to $910 million from $865 million in the same period a year earlier.

Pacific Sunwear of California ((PSUN)) announced a 5.7% decline in its February sales at stores open at least one year, missing the average analyst expectations of same-store sales drop of 3.7%.Total sales for the four weeks ended March 3 rose 1.2% to $88.7 million.

Pier 1 Imports ((PIR)) said its February same-store sales slipped 8.4%. Analysts had expected comparable-store sales to drop 4.4%. Total sales reached $120.5 million, an increase of 14.3%.

Sharper Image Corp. ((SHRP)) said Thursday its February same-store sales plunged 24%, coming in below forecast of a 16.7% decline. Total sales for the month ended Feb. 28 fell 29% to $22.1 million.

Meanwhile, high-end stores continued to shine. Luxury retailer Nordstrom ((JWN)) reported a 9.1% jump in same-store sales in February, beating the 5.7% estimate. Kohl’s Corp. ((KSS)) handily beat the 2.9% gain estimate with an increase of 4.4%. McDonald’s ((MCD)) posted February same-store sales increase of 5.7%.


[R]8:00AM NY-7:00PM Mumbai Sensex spurts Thursday on buying in large-caps.[/R]
The Sensex finished 469.60 points, or 3.73%, higher at 13,049.35. The market-breadth was strong as there were more two gainers for every decliner. For 1,748 stocks that advanced, 776 declined and only 57 stocks were unchanged. Of the 30 stocks in the Sensex, there were no decliners. The turnover on NSE was Rs 7,954.06 crore, compared with Rs 8,881.84 crore on Wednesday.

Economic news

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said that more public sector units should be listed in the stock exchanges. He also said that that the government will build stronger public sector companies and give it full managerial and financial autonomy. He also said that the economy was expected to grow over 9% during the fiscal 2007. He announced that the government was ready to change the approach to SEZs and added that land acquisition and resettlement has to be done equitable to farmers.

State Bank of India, the largest commercial bank in the country, will announce 50-100 basis points rise in lending rates this month in the wake of the recent 75 basis points increase in the prime lending rate.

Two acre plot of land located in Kalina, suburb of Mumbai was purchased local retail mall InOrbit for Rs 333 crores. Rising real estate prices have now reached bubble levels in many parts of Mumbai, Bangalore and New Delhi.

Trading highlights

Reliance Industries was the most-active stock with a turnover of Rs 199.70 crore followed by Indus Fila and newly listed MindTree Consulting. The software service company IPO surged more than 55% on the first day of trading and rose another 2% or Rs 14 to close at Rs 634.

Advancers

Hindustan Lever jumped nearly 9.5% to Rs 183.8, BHEL rallied 8% to Rs 2,175.5 and Gujarat Ambuja soared 8.4% to Rs 112.9. Other strong performers included HDFC Bank spurting 6.2% to Rs 972.3, Ranbaxy surged 6.2% to Rs 328.8, Dr Reddy’s Lab rose 6.7% to Rs 677, Grasim advanced 6.2% to Rs 2,235.2 and L&T rose 4.6% to Rs 1,521.1.

Telecom stocks kept their momentum and gained for the second straight day on the eve of the listing of Idea Cellular on Friday on March 9, 2007. Reliance Communications surged 5.6% to Rs 434.1, and Bharti Airtel gained 4.8% to Rs 757.5. Idea Cellular is to listed on the bourses on Friday, March 9 2007 and had priced its IPO at the upper end of Rs 65 - Rs 75 price band on a strong response to the issue.

Index heavy Reliance Industries advanced 3.6% to Rs 1,335 and IPCL jumped 11.8% to Rs 259. Reliance said that its board will meet on March 10 2007 to consider a proposal for merging subsidiary, IPCL, with the company.

Steel stocks rebounded on intense buying on firm global steel prices. SAIL jumped 15% to Rs 107, and JSW Steel rose 8% to Rs 447.70. Tata Steel advanced nearly 4% to Rs 428.90. Shareholders of the Corus Group have agreed to Tata Steel $12 billion takeover of the European steelmaker. SBI, Wipro and Satyam ended with gains of around 3.5% each at Rs 1,000, Rs 577, Rs 446, respectively.

Decliners

There were no decliners of the 30 stocks in the Sensex.


[R]6:30AM Europe was higher Thursday morning on commodities, earnings.[/R]
European markets advanced on Thursday morning. The German DAX Xetra 30 rose 0.4% at 6,646.51, the French CAC 40 rose 0.5% at 5,481.55 and the U.K. FTSE 100 rose 0.4% at 6,179.90.

Advancers

Suez, which is trying to merge with Gaz de France, advanced 1.3%. The firm announced its profit grew an above-forecast 43.5% to 3.6 billion euros, a record high, on cost reduction measures. Aegon advanced after reporting a 19% profit rise and Anglo Irish Bank climbed after saying first-half earnings per share should rise 40%.

BP was up 1.2% extending gains from Wednesday on an unexpected dwindling of U.S. energy inventories. Veolia shares added 1.5% as a 23.5% dividend hike to 1.05 euros a share offset a below-forecast profit increase of 22% to 759 million euros. PPR the owner of French department stores and the luxury goods group Gucci, gained 1.4% having said its annual profit rose a stronger-than-forecast 28%.

Decliners

Carrefour, one of the most volatile stocks on Wednesday, were flat although it said 2006 profit jumped 58% to 2.27 billion euros or up an in-line 3% when excluding sale of its Korean operations. Pernod Ricard shares slipped 3.9% after the maker of Martell brandy reported a below-forecast 2.4% first-half profit rise.

Oil and gold

Crude oil traded near $62 a barrel in New York on speculation that gasoline demand will rise as the summer driving season approaches in the U.S. Crude oil for April delivery rose 5 cents to $61.87 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange in early trade in London. Brent crude fell 1 cent to $62.49 a barrel on the ICE Futures exchange in London. Gold opened Thursday at a bid price of $652.35 a troy ounce, up from $647.50 late Wednesday.

Currencies

The euro has risen 0.8% against the dollar in the past month to $1.3150 on the premise the central bank will increase its main refinancing rate to 3.75% from 3.50%. The yen dropped to 154.08 per euro in London from 152.93 in New York late yesterday. It fell to 117.15 against the dollar from 116.06. The pound gained against the yen and climbed for a third day versus the dollar before interest-rate setting meeting today by the Bank of England. Against the yen, the pound rose to 226.10 and was at 225.69 by in London from 224.35 late yesterday. The pound advanced against the dollar, trading at $1.9347 compared with 1.9330 yesterday.

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