Market Updates

Record Dow Jones Average

123jump.com Staff
01 Oct, 2007
New York City

    After four hours of trading market averages in New York reached higher with Dow Jones at a new high. NCR spun-off its data warehousing division Teradata. Nokia is reported to be in advanced discussion with digital mapping company Navteq for a price of $1.8 billion. Of the S&P500 stocks 406 traded higher. Walgreen fell 14% after reporting a decline in earnings on highe generic drug costs. A H Belo plans to spinoff newspaper busines from the TV operations.

[R]1:30 PM New York – Markets in the U.S. trade higher after more information from banks on subprime losses. Nokia and Navteq discuss merger.[/R]

The Dow Jones Industrial Average climbed as high as 14,080.70, above its record close of 14000.41 set in July. Less than an hour after the opening bell the Dow was trading 0.7% higher at 13997.97. The S&P 500 was up 1,542 points or 1.02% at 1,537.14 with 406 stocks reporting gains and only 93 were down.

This comes after a report on the manufacturing sector came in below analysts’ expectations. Manufacturing in the U.S. grew in September at the slowest pace in six months as orders declined and companies reduced inventories.

Teradata Corp. ((TDC)) after a spin-off from NCR jumped 5.83% to $27.60. Teradata Corp. began operating as an independent company on Monday as the data warehousing business completed its spinoff from NCR Corp.

According to the press release from the Teradata, “NCR shareholders received one share of Teradata common stock for every one share of common stock they held in NCR as of the close of business on September 14, 2007. One hundred percent of the approximately 181 million shares of Teradata common stock were distributed.”

Freeport-McMoRan ((FCX)) was up $4.25 or 4.05% to $109.14. The group is believed to have benefited from the integration of its takeover of Phelps Dodge.

Leading the decliners was Walgreen ((WAG)) after reporting a decline in fourth quarter earnings due in part to lower reimbursements on popular generic drugs and higher expenses. Fourth quarter earnings decrease 3.8%; diluted earnings per share decrease 2.4% to 40 cents. The company plans to spend $2 billion in the fiscal 2008 primarily to open 550 new stores. For the fiscal year 2007 the net earnings increased 16.6% to $2.04 billion and earnings per share increased 18% to $2.03 per diluted share.

“This quarter was negatively impacted by lower generic drug reimbursements, combined with higher salary and store expenses, and higher advertising costs,” said Chairman Jeffrey A. Rein.

The stock dropped $6.74, or 14.27% to $40.50.

Also among decliners was SuperValu ((SVU)) down $2.74, or 7.02% to $36.27. Analysts believe the company will struggle to modernize its store base and may face pricing pressure in the next nine to twelve months.

[R]12:00PM New York – Banks are in focus ahead of earnings and on the warnings of losses in subprime from UBS and Citigroup.[/R]

Stocks in New York are trading higher in the morning. Dow Jones is at 140,045.52 up more than 1%, Nasdaq is at 2,733.71 up 32.21, and S&P 500 is up 15.97 to 1,542.71.

Citigroup warned investors that current credit market troubles in the subprime sector will lower its earnings by 60% in the third quarter. Citigroup earnings in the third quarter are now expected to fall near $2.2 billion. The company earned $5.51 billion or $1.10 per share and was expected to earn $1.09 per share prior to today’s announcement. The bank also said that it will release its earnings four days earlier on October 15th.

Citigroup said that expects a loss of $600 million in trading operations, $2.6 billion in credit losses, will write down loans of $1.3 billion in subprime mortgages and LBO lending and $1.4 billion in LBO loans.

The press release added that the “write-downs of approximately $1.4 billion pre-tax, net of underwriting fees, on funded and unfunded highly leveraged finance commitments. These commitments totaled $69 billion at the end of the second quarter, and $57 billion at the end of the third quarter. Write-downs were recorded on all highly leveraged finance commitments where there was value impairment, regardless of the expected funding date.”
The bank recorded losses in the sub-prime mortgage market and further added in the release that “losses of approximately $1.3 billion pre-tax, net of hedges, on the value of sub-prime mortgage-backed securities warehoused for future collateralized debt obligation securitizations, CDO positions, and leveraged loans warehoused for future collateralized loan obligation securitizations.”

Citigroup ((C)) stock fell in the opening by 1% to recover later and traded up 2.5%.

Separately UBS ((UBS)) reported that it is likely to report a loss in the third quarter on the account of Swiss France 4 billion losses in bond portfolio. The loss will be its first loss in more than seven years. In the third quarter the group is expected to report a loss between Swiss Franc of 600 and 800 million and pre-tax profit for the first nine months will be near CHF 10 billion.

The company also plan to lay-off 1,500 people and replace its head of investment banking unit and group CFO. The investment bank chairman and CEO Huw Jenkins will “step down” and Group CFO Clive Standish to “retire”.

[R]6:00AM New York, 7:00PM Tokyo, Business confidence climbs near two year high at 23 points. Sony completed its life insurance unit IPO. Manufacturing survey showed appetite for investment. Yen weakens.[/R]

In Tokyo trading Japan’s stock index recovered from morning losses to close 0.38% higher or 60.27 to 16,845.96 on the first trading day of the week. Stocks were lifted by economic survey from the central bank showed improving business sentiment and plans by big companies to increase investment. Automotive exporter Mitsubishi Motor Corporation led advancers, climbing 5.14%, as the yen weakened.

Of the Nikkei 225 stocks 120 rose, 196 slipped and 9 traded unchanged. Nineteen stocks gained more than 1%.

Bank of Japan’s quarterly Tankan survey, for the last four weeks, showed the headline diffusion index, which measures sentiment at large manufacturers, stayed at 23 points. Economists had forecasted it would decline to 21 points. Sentiment climbed to a 2-year high of 25 points in December 2006, but has stayed at 23 points in the last three surveys.

Large companies increased their sales and profit estimate for the fiscal year ending March and plan to shore up investment by 8.7% from 7.7% in June. Japanese exports to China and Europe, coupled with the weakening yen, have helped to offset losses associated to the economic slowdown in the U.S.

However, big manufacturers’ outlook index for December was measured at 19 points, while for big non-manufacturers it stood at 21 points on expectations that business conditions will deteriorate to December due to the anticipated economic slowdown in the U.S. caused by the subprime mortgage crisis.

Overall index for large non-manufacturers slumped to 20 points compared to 22 points in June. However, confidence among non-manufacturers and smaller firms weakened as the five categories of small manufacturers and non-manufacturers fell from June.The manufacturer’s index was at 1 point in September from 6 points in June, while it fell to –10 from –7 in June.

Tankan index, a survey of more than 10,000 businesses including 2,400 large businesses, for workers demand declined to –7, the lowest since 1992, further indicating that there is a labor shortage. The Ministry of Labor said today that wages increased for the first time in nine months by 0.1% in August as unemployment rate hovered near a nine year low begins to spur wages.

Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda said today he would strive to achieve primary trade balance by the fiscal year 2011.

Sony Corp completed initial public offering of its insurance unit, Sony Life Insurance Company. The company sold 800,000 shares at 400,000 yen, at the high end of the range of its filing range. In the largest offering in Tokyo for the year, Sony sold 725,000 and the rest were sold by the company. Sony share closed up 55 yen to 5,650 yen.

Of the Nikkei 225 index, Mitsubishi Motor Corporation led the gainers with a rise of soaring 5.14%, followed by gains of 4.52% in Tokyo Dome Corporation, 4.46% in Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group, 4.37% in Fast Retailing, and 4.15% in Kikkoman Corporation.

Mitsubishi Motors advanced on weakening yen and positive earnings projections. Last week, the company revised half-year operating profit upward from 5 billion yen to 136 billion yen. Sales forecasts were reviewed up from 1.17 trillion yen to 1.27 trillion yen.

Mitsubishi UFJ rose on the stock split of 1 to 100 and reducing the minimum trading lot at 100 shares.

IHI Corporation led declining stocks in the index with a loss of 22%, followed by losses in Fuji Electric Company of 19.53%, Shimizu Corporation of 5.60%, Hitachi Zosen 4.62%, Mitsub Heavy Industry of 4.57%.

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