Market Updates
Techs Drive Late NY Rally; Europe, Asia Lower
123jump.com Staff
27 Jun, 2007
New York City
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Falling interest rates, rising tech stocks and crude oil all impacted market averages in New York. May durable goods orders fell more than expected. Financial, brokerage stocks rose again as traders put aside sub-prime lending worries for a day. Oracle, Nike and ConAgra report better than expected earnings. European markets close lower on rate hike worries. Brazil, Argentina and Mexico rebounded. Shanghai bucks the regional trend and closed up. Australia lost 2%.
[R]4:00PM NY, 10:00 PM Frankfurt, 1:30AM Mumbai – Global Markets[/R]
Yields edged lower on 10-year U.S. bonds and closed at 5.07% and 30-year bond rose to close at 5.19%.
Crude oil advanced $1.20 to close at $68.97 per barrel, natural gas up 5 cent to close at $6.93 per mBtu, and gasoline futures fell 0.77 cents to close at 225.46 cents per gallon.
Gold lost 50 cents to close at $644.80 per ounce, silver lost 22 cents to close at $12.32 per ounce, and copper futures lost $109 to close at $7,420 per metric ton.
In New York trading, afternoon rally lifted averages to their day’s high largely on tech stocks, falling interest rates and durable goods report. The orders in May dropped 2.8% after gaining 1.1% in April. Stocks of financial brokers rallied after worries related to sub-prime lending eased. Bear Stearns, Lehman Brothers and Goldman Sachs advanced nearly 3%. Two deals worth $5 billion were reported today, Guitar Center agreed to a buyout for $2 billion from Bain Capital and CommScope agreed to purchase Andrew Corp for $2.7 billion. Guitar Center ((GTRC)) jumped 20% and Andre Corp ((ANDW)) surged 11%.
Nike ((NKE)) jumped 8% to close at record level of $58.29 on 34% rise in earnings. Oracle gained 2.8% after the company reported earnings growth of 23% and ConAgra gained 5% on fiscal fourth quarter profit jumped three times. H&R Block ((HRB)) gained 4% on the news that the activist shareholders are seeking board seats. Best Buy ((BBY)) jumped 5% after the company reported 30% increase in dividend and revised stock buyback plan of $5.5 billion. McCormick ((MKC)) jumped 8% on the earnings of 31 cents in the second quarter and company revised outlook for earnings growth between 9% and 11% gain from a year ago.
Latin Markets rebounded across the region led by 1.4% rise in Argentina, 0.5% gain in Brazil, 0.3% increase in Chile and added 0.2% in Mexico. Venezuelan Bolivar fell nearly 3% in parallel currency market to 4,180 to a dollar after ExxonMobil and ConocoPhillips decided to abandon their operations in largest oilfield in the country.
In Mexico City trading, IPC Index edged 0.2% in Mexico. National Statistics Institute’s economic activity index in April rose to 3.2% in April from a year ago. The index which approximates rise in GDP indicated that the economic expansion may be picking up. Late rally in New York helped large cap Mexican stocks advance. Telmex, American Movil, and Homex gained between 1% and 2%.
In Sao Paulo trading, Bovespa gained 0.3% on a late rebound in New York trading. Petrobras, TAM, CVRD and Itau gained more than 1%. TAM jumped 3%. Ethanol and sugar producer Cosan fell 2% today and dropped 10% in the last two days the after the company said that it plans a listing in New York and raise funds for expansion by issuing a different class of stock. CCR Rodovias jumped 4% on a broker report that the company will bid for toll road operation in Mexico.
European markets closed lower across the region on profit taking in mining, banks and insurance stocks and worries related to health of the U.S. economy. Fall in durable orders in May months hurt market sentiment. Norway led the region with a loss of 1.2% followed by a decline of 0.8% in Germany, 0.7% in the Netherlands, and 0.5% in Spain, Switzerland and the U.K.
In Frankfurt trading, DAX Index fell 0.8%, fifth decline in a row, on worries that rate hike in Europe and slowdown in the U.S. will hurt earnings of banks and auto companies. proSiebensat.1 Media jumped 4% on the news that it will be merged with SBS Broadcasting Group valued at 3.3 billion euros. Deutsche Bank, Deutsche Boerse and Deutsche Telekom fell nearly 2%. Axel Springer advanced 0.8% on the news that it has acquired 41% stake in French women’s website Aufeminine.com and plans to buy rest of shareholders as well.
In London trading, FTSE Index fell 0.5%. Northern Rock stock fell 12% after reporting that earnings for the current year will be at 15%, lower than 17% average expected by analysts. The news dragged stocks of other mortgage lenders HBOS, Bradford Bingley and Alliance Leicester by 2.5%. Home builder George Wimpey fell 2.5% after the company said that market conditions for the second half less favorable. AstraZeneca jumped 3% on a report that its experimental drug many benefit diabetes patients in a trial. Vodafone Group jumped 2.4%. BHP Billiton fell 4% in London trading and fell nearly 2% in Sydney trading.
OMX Group fell 5% on the report in Financial Times that Swedish government may oppose Nasdaq Stockmarket Inc bid to acquire the stock market operator. European Union vetoed Ryanair plan to acquire Aer Lingus for $2 billion. Gaz de France and Suez jumped 1% on a news report in Le Figaro that merger proposal between two utilities may be revived.
Asian Markets fell for the fourth day only with steeper losses after indexes retreated from record levels. Australia and Philippines led the region’s decline with a loss of 1.9%. Indonesia and Japan followed with a loss of 1.2%. South Korea fell for the third day with a loss of 1%. Shanghai rebounded with a gain of 2.7% followed by 0.4% gain in Thailand.
In Tokyo trading, weak commodities prices and worries of exports to the U.S. left stocks lower. The yen rebounded from 50-month low for the third day. Retail sales in May month gained 0.5% from April. Auto sales declined 4.5% but food and beverage sales jumped 1.7%. Exporters continued to slide led by 2.8% decrease in Nikon, 2.2% slide in Canon, 1.8% decline in Sony, 1.7% fall in Toyota. Marubeni and Mitsui fell more than 3%.
In Shanghai trading, CSI Index rebounded 2.7% bucking the regional trend. PetroChina is in the process of selecting investment bankers for its offering of $6 billion in Shanghai. According to Bloomberg News UBS is appointed as lead manager for the offering. Shanghai Automotive gained 4% after the government reported that profit for thr first five months at industrial companies controlled by the government soared 42% to $120 billion on 27% increase in sales. Shanghai Zhenhua Port Machinery Co., construction and port crane maker jumped 7%.
In Hong Kong trading, Hang Sang Index lost 0.4%. Hong Kong market affirmed the downward trend in the U.S. Melco International, casino operator in Macau, soared 7% on the news that it will operate Playboy Casino. Cnooc and PetroChina fell in sympathy with falling oil prices. China Mobile dropped 1.6% and HSBC Bank lost 0.8%.
In Sydney trading, Index corrected 2% ahead of closing of fiscal year at the end of June. Falling metals and oil prices did not help either. BHP Billiton fell 1.8%, National Australian Bank dropped 2% but Fortescue Metals lost 9%.
In Mumbai trading, Sensex Index dropped 0.5%. Rupee weakened after gaining nearly 9% against dollar in the first six months of trading. Air India launched cargo carrier to meet rising international trade and freight demands. Rupee weakness helped tech and software exporters. GMR Infrastructure led the most active stocks.
[R]1:00PM NY, 5:00 PM Frankfurt European markets closed down, dragged by rate worries. Banks and miners led decliners.[/R]
European stock markets finished in the negative territory on Wednesday, pressured by weakness among banks and miners amid much weaker-than-expected U.S. durable goods data.
Rate-sensitive mining and financial-services stocks led decliners, with shares of miner BHP Billiton down 2.8% and insurer AXA falling 0.9%. Interest rates also dragged British mortgage lender Northern Rock. Shares of the lender dropped 12% after it said it expects growth of about 15% in underlying attributable profit for 2007, lower than the 17% growth rate expected by analysts. Rivals Bradford & Bingley and Alliance & Leicester also posted losses, falling more than 2.6% in London.
In merger-and-acquisition news, ProSiebenSat.1 Media climbed 4.1% after the German broadcaster agreed to buy SBS Broadcasting Group from private-equity groups and the Dutch government for 3.3 billion euros. Among other stocks posting gains, shares of utilities Gaz de France and Suez rose 3.7% and 1%, respectively, after the French government said all options remain open for reviewing the merger talks between the two companies. The U.K.'s FTSE 100 closed down 0.5% at 6,527.60, the German DAX lost 0.8% at 7,801.23 and the French CAC-40 slipped 0.2% at 5,941.76.
[R]11:30AM Market averages turned mixed on rate worries. The Nasdaq advanced, helped by Oracle, AMD.[/R]
U.S. market averages traded in a lackluster fashion, reflecting strength in the tech sector, weak economic data, as well as continuous worries about the subprime mortgage market and hedge fund woes. Investors were also unwilling to make big moves ahead of the Fed Reserve’s decision on interest rates.
The Nasdaq moved notably higher, as Oracle ((ORCL)) gave tech shares a boost with 2% gain on better-than-expected earnings. The tech-heavy average was also supported by strength in the semiconductor sector. Advanced Micro Devices ((AMD)) rose 2.5%, standing out as one of the sector's best performances. At the same time, Dow components Caterpillar ((CAT)), down 2.2%, Boeing ((BA)), down 0.6%, and Alcoa ((AA)), down 0.7% dragged the blue-chip average.
Banking, oil and hardware stocks moved to the downside, while semiconductors and utilities gained. The weakness in the oil sector continued despite rallying crude oil futures after weekly data showed a drop in gasoline inventories. In merger-and-acquisition news, Guitar Center ((GTRC)) soared 19% after it agreed to be bought by affiliates of Bain Capital Partners LLC, a private investment company, in a deal worth approximately $2.1 billion.
The Dow Jones industrial average fell 5.61, or 0.04%, to 13,332.05, after dropping about 80 points in earlier trading. The Standard & Poor's 500 index gained 0.41, or 0.03%, to 1,493.30, and the Nasdaq composite index advanced 6.55, or 0.25%, to 2,580.71. Treasury bonds rose following the weak durable goods. The 10-year Treasury note's yield fell to 5.06% from 5.09% late Tuesday.
[R]Durable goods orders dropped 2.8% in May.[/R]
Wednesday morning, the Department of Commerce released its report on durable goods orders in the month of May, showing that orders for manufactured goods meant to last at least three years fell much more than economists had been expecting. The report showed that durable goods orders fell 2.8 percent in May following an upwardly revised 1.1 percent increase in April. Economists had been expecting orders to fall by 1.0 percent compared to the 0.8 percent increase originally reported for the previous month. The bigger than expected drop in durable goods orders was largely due to a steep drop in orders for transportation equipment, which fell 6.8 percent in May after falling 1.8 percent in April. A 22.7 percent drop in orders for commercial aircraft and parts contributed to the decline.
The Commerce Department said that excluding orders for transportation equipment, durable goods orders fell by a more modest 1.0 percent in May compared to a 2.5 percent increase in the previous month. Notable decreases in orders for primary metals, heavy machinery, and electrical equipment, appliances, and components also contributed to the bigger than expected drop in durable goods orders. At the same time, the report showed a notable increase in orders for defense capital goods, which rose 6.7 percent in May after coming in unchanged in April. Excluding orders for defense, durable goods orders showed a 3.2 percent drop. The report also showed that shipments of durable goods rose 0.4 percent in May following a 2.0 percent increase in April, while inventories or durable goods edged up 0.2 percent after a 0.4 percent increase in the previous month.
[R]9:45AM Wall Street opened lower on weak durable goods orders and nervousness ahead of Fed’s decision on rates.[/R]
Wall Street opened in the negative, pressured by much weaker-than-expected durable goods orders and cautiousness ahead of the Fed Reserve's two-day meeting on interest rates. The Commerce Department reported that durable goods orders in May dropped by 2.8%, a steeper drop than the decline of 1.7%, anticipated by investors. The weak data sparked concerns that the U.S. economy will not recover from its recent slowdown.
The downward trend was bucked by positive earnings releases, indicating stronger corporate profit growth in Q2. Conagra ((CAG)) added 1.7% after reporting a Q4 profit of $192 million, or 39 cents per share, vs. a profit of $59.2 million, or 11 cents, a year ago. Quarterly results beat estimates of earnings of 31 cents per share on revenue of $2.83 billion.
Among other earnings-related movers, Nike Inc. ((NKE)) posted 325 profit increase in the most recent quarter compared to the year-ago period. Nike rose 4%. Among tech stocks, Oracle Corp. ((ORCL)) reported 23% profit rise and said that said sales in the current quarter may rise more than expected. Shares gained 2%.
The Dow Jones industrial average fell 56.99, or 0.43%, to 13,280.67. The Standard & Poor's 500 index fell 7.77, or 0.52%, to 1,485.12, and the Nasdaq composite index fell 5.19, or 0.20%, to 2,568.97. Treasury bonds rose after the weak durable goods data drove investors to the safe-haven assets. The 10-year Treasury note's yield fell to 5.04% from 5.09% late Tuesday.
[R]9:30AM The FTSE 100 is lower in mid-morning trade Wednesday.[/R]
The UK market is down on Wednesday. In late morning trade, the FTSE 100 lost 32.2 points to 6,527.1.
Political news
Tony Blair stepped down as prime minister today to make room for Gordon Brown, Chancellor of the Exchequer in Mr. Blair’s cabinet, to head the UK Government.
Advancers
Bus and train group Stagecoach was one of the very few advancers in the morning, reporting a big rise in full year profits Wednesday tracking strong growth in its bus and rail operations in the UK and North America. The stock rose 5.3%.
Hikma Pharmaceuticals surged after saying that first half revenues are expected to increase about 40%. The shares of the company advanced 5.4%.
Decliners
Northern Rock, a mortgage bank, plummeted 9.6% as it downgraded its profit guidance quoting a rise in funding costs. The bank added that annual profits would grow by 15 %, less than the 17 % anticipated by the market.
The lender was also responsible for the sharp decline in the mid-cap index, where Paragon Group, a specialist mortage lender, fell 6.4% and Bradford & Bingley lost 3.7%.
Other banks followed suit and plunged. Alliance & Leicester was off 2.9%, HBOS declined 2.3% and Lloyds TSB was down 2.1%.
Seven FTSE 100 constituents were trading without further rights to their latest dividend payment. Among them were United Utilities which lost 4 %, Tate & Lyle falling 2.7 % to 568p and Yell Group retreating 2.8 %.
[R]9:00AM Market futures declined amid weak durable goods orders.[/R]
U.S. stock futures moved to the downside Wednesday, weighed down by an unexpectedly steep decline in durable-goods orders in May. However, better-than-forecast earnings from Nike Inc. and Oracle Corp. bucked the downward trend.
Nike ((NKE)) jumped 5% in pre-open trade after posting a 32% profit rise and the fastest growth in orders in the last four years. Oracle ((ORCL)) gained 0.5% after reporting a 23% profit rise in Q4, helped by acquisition deals.
In other corporate news, Nuvelo ((NUVO)) slipped 22% after the biopharmaceutical terminated its collaboration with Bayer on a blood-clot drug. Guitar Center ((GTRC)) soared 19.9% after agreeing to be bought by Bain Capital in a deal worth $1.9 billion. S&P 500 futures dropped 4.1 points at 1,493.70 and Nasdaq 100 futures dropped 4.5 points at 1,921.00. Dow industrial futures fell 26 points.
[R]8:30AM Asian markets decline Wednesday with only China bucking the downtrend.[/R]
Asian markets declined Wednesday. The Nikkei 225 Average settled 1.2% lower at 17,849. Toyota Motor Corp., the largest automaker in Japan, lost 1.7%, a record in almost three weeks. Another exporter, which declined was Nikon, down 2.8%. Brokerage houses lost on concern over energy projects in Russia and Venezuela, involving high geopolitical risk. Marubeni declined 3.2%, while Mitsui & Co. shed 3.6%.
Hong Kong Hang Seng Index fell 0.4% to close at 21,705. China Mobile declined 1.6%, and HSBC lost 0.8%. Oil companies also lost. Sinopec declined for a third straight day, 0.7% lower, in the wake of the surprise resignation of its chairman, and Cnooc lost 1.63%.
In South Korea, the Kospi Index lost 0.9% to 1,733. Banks declined on worries of further measures on the side of the central bank to cool down liquidity. Kookmin Bank closed down 1.7% and Korea Exchange Bank fell 3%. Hyundai bucked the trend and rose 2.1%. Australian S&P/ASX 200 plunged 2% to 6,184. Weak commodities weighed on the market with mining company BHP Billiton, down 1.8.
China bucked the trend and advanced on bargain hunting of oversold companies. High-tech company Beijing Centergate Technologies and FAW Car both advanced by the daily limit of 10%. The Shanghai Composite Index rallied 2.7% to end at 4,078..
[R]8:00AM Oracle reported better-than-forecast Q4 profit and sales.[/R]
Oracle ((ORCL)), software giant, announced after the closing bell Thursday a better-than-expected 23% earnings increase in Q4. The company said that net earnings rose to $1.6 billion, or 31 cents per share, compared with $1.3 billion, or 24 cents per share a year earlier. Quarterly revenues jumped 20% to $5.8 billion. Excluding charges, it would have earned 37 cents a share, exceeding analyst forecast for operating earnings per share at 35 cents and revenues at $5.61 billion.
The business software maker also said that sales are expected to accelerate in the current quarter. Oracle has spent $25 billion buying other software makers. The strategy of bundling these products together and offering a comprehensive suite of software has proved successful, leading to bigger deals and a larger number of customers. Shares of Oracle Corp. added 1.3% in pre-market trading Wednesday.
[R]7:30AM NY-6:30PM Mumbai Sensex ends 70 points lower on weak auto and metal shares.[/R]
The Sensex on BSE finished 70.02 points lower, or 0.48%, at 14,431.06.
The market-breadth turned negative in the latter part of trading. As 1,245 stocks advanced, 1,388 stocks declined and 64 were unchanged. Of the 30 stocks in the Sensex, only 10 advanced, while the rest declined. The turnover on BSE was Rs 4,685 crore, compared to Rs 4,706 crore on Tuesday. On NSE, the turnover was Rs 9,375 crore, slightly lower than Rs 9,557 crore on Tuesday.
Economic news
The rupee declined for the fourth straight day on talks that financial inflows from abroad will shrink after foreign companies had completed buying new shares offers that drew money from overseas. The rupee fell 0.2% to 41.005 against the dollar in morning trading in Mumbai.
Air India Ltd., the biggest carrier overseas, opened freighter operations with two Airbus SAS planes to meet the increasing demand for transporting goods in India, the second-fastest in growth major economy. The weekly schedule of four flights to Frankfurt and Paris via Bangalore and Saudi Arabia will tap into rising air cargo traffic. India total international trade including imports and exports is expected to cross $250 billion in the current fiscal year.
Trading highlights
GMR Infrastructure was the most active stock with a turnover of Rs 297 crore followed by India Infoline and new issue Nelcast.
Advancers
Software exporting companies stocks advanced on weaker rupee. Satyam Computers spurted 2.6% to Rs 468, and led the gainers while Wipro advanced 0.2% to Rs 510, TCS gained 0.9% to Rs 1,133 and Infosys Technologies added 0.7% to Rs 1,936. TCS announced on Tuesday, June 26 2007, that it had struck an agreement with Italian car maker Ferrari to provide the complete software to manage Formula one car fleet of.
Auto stocks traded mixed. Hero Honda advanced 0.9% to Rs 676 and Bajaj Auto gained nearly 0.2% to Rs 2,131. Other gainers included Grasim up 0.3% to Rs 2,503 and Gujarat Ambuja Cements, 0.3% higher to Rs 116.
Decliners
NTPC led the decliners, down 2.1% to Rs 150. Reliance Communications declined 2% to Rs 515 and Reliance Energy lost also 2% to Rs 578. Aluminium and copper large-cap Hindalco Industries declined 0.6% to Rs 170 on a decline in global metal prices on Tuesday, June 26 2007.
Tata Motors declined 1.8% to Rs 672 and Maruti Udyog lost 0.7% to Rs 752 but Hero Honda and Bajaj Auto fell.
Ranbaxy Laboratories lost 1.4% to Rs 343 and index heavy Reliance Industries lost 0.3% to Rs 1,698. HDFC Bank and Tata Steel lost over 1% each to Rs 1,091 and Rs 596, respectively.
[R]7:00AM European markets decline Wednesday on weak Northern Rock, Sacyr Vallehermoso.[/R]
European markets declined on Wednesday. By mid-day, Frankfurt Xetra Dax fell 0.8% to 7,796.86, the CAC 40 in Paris lost 0.6% to 5,915.36 and London FTSE 100 slid 0.7% to 6,512.1. National benchmarks fell today in all of the 17 western European markets that were open.
Advancers
Banca Popolare di Milano Scrl surged 4.5%. The northern Italian lender failed to approve changes to its company rules that would have allowed the planned takeover of Banca Popolare dell'Emilia Romagna Scrl to take place
Gaz de France, the operator of biggest natural-gas network in Europe, rallied 1.8%. The French government could approve in coming days a long-planned merger between Gaz de France and Suez.
Decliners
Northern Rock plummeted more than 10%. Deutsche Bank AG, the biggest bank in Germany, and Axa SA, the second-largest insurer in Europe, also tracked the decline. Deutsche Bank lost 1.6%. UBS AG, the biggest bank by assets in Europe, declined 1.4%. Axa fell 1.3%, and Allianz, the largest insurer in Europe, dropped 1.6%.
Sacyr Vallehermoso fell 7.4%. The Spanish builder seeking to acquire French competitor Eiffage SA broke stock-market rules in an attempt to take control of the company and must make a fresh takeover bid.
Commodities
Gold for immediate delivery climbed $1.60, or 0.3%, to $642.50 an ounce after earlier trading at $639.50, the lowest since March 14. Silver increased 0.5 cent to $12.255 an ounce.
Platinum declined for a third consecutive day in London on speculation wage talks will avert a strike in South Africa. Platinum for immediate delivery dropped $1, or 0.1%, to $1,266.50 an ounce and palladium rose $1.50, or 0.4%, to $367.50 an ounce.
Crude oil declined, trading below $68 a barrel in New York, on expectations that U.S. gasoline supplies rose for an eighth straight week. Crude oil for August delivery fell to $67.35 a barrel, a decline of 42 cents, in after-hours electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Brent crude oil for August settlement fell as low as $70.01 a barrel, a decline of 16 cents on the ICE Futures exchange in London.
Currencies
The euro slipped Wednesday against the U.S. dollar. The euro declined slightly to $1.3433 in morning trading in Europe, from $1.3456 Tuesday evening. The dollar also rose against the pound, which fell to $1.9942 from US$1.9987. Meanwhile, the dollar fell against the Japanese yen, to 122.58 yen from 123.24 the previous evening.
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