Market Updates
Google and Yahoo Gain
Elena
06 Jan, 2006
New York City
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U.S. stocks sharply advanced at opening on disappointing employment report, which gave investors ground to consider it a sign that the Fed Reserve will stop raising interest rates. Market sentiment was also supported by earnings upgrades for Google and Yahoo. In corporate news, Microsoft was downgraded by Credit Suisse First Boston to neutral from outperform. IBM announced freezing of its pension plan in 2008.
U.S. MARKET AVERAGES
U.S. averages started sharply higher, lifted by disappointing job growth in December which was interpreted by traders as a sign that the Fed Reserve will stop rate hikes. Broker’s higher earnings estimates for Google and Yahoo Inc. also provided support. Technology giants IBM Corp. and Microsoft Corp. were expected to be in the spotlight.
The Labor Department released payrolls data, showing 108,000 gain in payrolls registered in December. Figures came far below economists'' expectations of non-farm payrolls to rise by 215,000 in December and November''s growth of 305,000. The unemployment rate slightly declined to 4.9% from 5%.
IBM announced it would be freezing its U.S. pension plan, starting in 2008.
Microsoft was downgraded by Credit Suisse First Boston to neutral from outperform, with the broker saying the stock only is 10% shy of its price target.
Starbucks Corp. reported after Thursday''s close a 7% same-store sales rise for December, at the upper end of the coffee chain''s targeted range.
Technology consultant Accenture Ltd. may rise after reporting stronger earnings and revenue in the fiscal first quarter than forecast.
The gold sector resumed its advance Friday morning to gain 2.2%, although profit taking took it off intraday highs. The energy group reversed from yesterday''s decline, with the oil service sector up 1.6% and the oil sector climbing by about 1.5%. The technology sector was again a conspicuous advancer with solid gains in the semiconductor, networking and Internet stocks.
Among the early losers was the housing sector, posting a modest decline. Airline and biotech stocks were also weak.
The Dow Jones industrial average was up 48.23 points, or 0.44% The Standard & Poor''s 500 Index was up 5.58 points, or 0.44%. The technology-laced Nasdaq Composite Index was up 13.88 points, or 0.61%.
The 10-year yield drifted up, rising by 2.3 basis points at a level of 4.379%.
MOVERS AND SHAKERS
Goldman Sachs raised its implied value estimate for Google Inc. ((GOOG)) to $500 from $400 on higher earnings expectations. The stock rose 1.5%.
CalAmp Corp ((CAMP)), wireless equipment company, reported Q3 earnings of $5.44 million, or 23 cents a share, compared with $1.79 million, or 8 cents a share a year ago, exceeding estimates of 19 cents a share. However, the reported quarterly revenue of $64.5 million, compared with $57.1 million last year, came below expectations of $65 million. The company’s shares dropped 10%.
ECONOMIC NEWS
The Department of Labor released its closely watched report on U.S. employment in the month of December on Friday, showing weaker than expected growth. At the same time, the report also showed a significant upward revision to November employment growth.
The report showed that the U.S. economy added 108,000 jobs in December following an upwardly revised increase of 305,000 jobs in November. Economists had been expecting jobs to increase by 215,000, which would have matched the increase previously reported for November.
The Labor Dept. noted that the increase in December reflected gains in manufacturing, health care, food services and drinking places, and professional and business services. A decrease in employment in the transportation and warehousing industry helped to offset the gains.
The report also showed that the unemployment rate unexpectedly edged down to 4.9 percent in December from 5.0 percent in November. The decrease in the unemployment rate came as some people left the labor market.
INTERNATIONAL MARKETS NEWS
Most Asian-Pacific benchmarks rallied, continuing a week-long winning streak on the back of strong tech shares and growing optimism about strong Japanese corporate results in 2006. South Korea’s Kospi hit an all-time high of 1.2% to 1,412.79 with Samsung Electronics, up 1.3%. Shanghai Composite rose 1%, while the Nikkei reached a five-year high of 16,428.21. Hong Kong ended up 0.5% on property and banking stocks.
European stocks traded in a tight range with support provided by tech stocks and investors awaiting U.S. payroll data. The German DAX 30 inched up 0.01%, the French CAC 40 gained 0.4%, and London’s FTSE 100 advanced 0.2%.
OIL, METALS, CURRENCIES
Crude oil prices advanced, boosted by increasing gasoline demand and strong economy. Light sweet crude for February delivery gained 47 cents to $63.26 a barrel. Gasoline slightly added to $1.7920 a gallon. London Brent climbed 42 cents to $61.55.
European gold climbed. In London gold rose to $529.50 per troy ounce from $526.90. In Zurich the precious metal advanced to $528.75 from $526.85. In Hong Kong gold fell $3.30 to close at $528.80. Silver opened at $8.80, down from $8.84.
The U.S. dollar traded higher against most major currencies. The euro was quoted at $1.2089, down from $1.2104. The dollar bought 116.19 yen, up from 115.85. The British pound traded at $1.7548, up from $1.7545.
EARNINGS NEWS
AZZ Inc. ((AZZ)), manufacturer of electrical products, reported a Q3 net income of 30 cents a share, up from 22 cents in the same period in fiscal 2004, beating analyst estimate of 23 cents per share. Quarterly revenue was up 16% from the prior year''s result.
The Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Company Inc. ((GAP)), supermarket chain, announced that net loss for Q3 of fiscal 2005 narrowed to $1.74 a share, from $1.96 a share. Its loss from continuing operations narrowed to $1.80 a share vs. $1.89 a share in the comparable period last year. Total sales dropped 37% to $1.58 billion due to $850 million in year-ago sales from A&P Canada, which the company sold in August, but U.S. comparable sales advanced 1.8%. The company said it intends to pursue the implementation of the cost cutting initiative and invest in upgrading its stores.
The Shaw Group Inc. ((SGR)), engineering and construction company, reported Q1 net income of 41 cents a share, up from 17 cents a share in the same period last year on 40% revenue growth, beating analyst estimate of 36 cents a share. The company attributed the revenue increase to emergency response and disaster relief work in the aftermath of two hurricanes, Katrina and Rita.
Wendy''s International Inc. ((WEN)), restaurant operator, announced that its U.S. Wendy''s Q4 same-store sales dropped 2.9% at company stores, and 1.9% at U.S. restaurants. Tim Hortons fourth-quarter same-store sales increased 5.8% in Canada, and 6.7% in the U.S. Baja Fresh Mexican Grill Q4 same-store sales dropped 2.9%. Wendy''s announced its strategic initiatives were on track with its original timeline.
Best Buy Co ((BBY)), home electronics retailer, reported that its December domestic same-store sales advanced 5.6%, and international same-store sales increased 6.6%. Revenue for the month ended Dec. 31, increased 12% to $5.7 billion. The retailer announced that it is well-positioned for Q4.
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