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[BRIEFING.COM] Stocks recently made a strong, upward move, but stiff resistance at the 1150 line quickly sent the S&P 500 on the backslide. The 1150 line marks the stock market's 52-week closing high.
The market's downturn has been broad based, but consumer staples stocks (+0.5%) and industrials (+0.1%) are still in positive territory, while every other major sector trades with a loss.
[BRIEFING.COM] The broader market is down modestly, but consumer staples stocks are up a solid 0.4% amid strength in shares of PepsiCo (PEP 65.95, +0.85), which announced that it plans to increase its annual dividend by 7% to $1.92 per share from $1.80 per share. The company also plans to return cash to shareholders through a $15 billion share repurchase plan through mid-2013.
Energy is presently at the other end of the spectrum. The sector is down 0.8% as oil prices are pushed 1.2% lower to $80.30 per barrel.
[BRIEFING.COM] S&P futures vs fair value: -6.40. Nasdaq futures vs fair value: -5.50. Stock futures are still bogged down with modest weakness. The pressure comes amid a stronger dollar and lackluster action overseas, where headlines continue report without detail about a potential financial aid plan for Greece and concerns persist for tighter monetary policy in China. To the latter point, the FOMC is scheduled to make its latest monetary policy decision tomorrow so participants could show some reservation ahead of the announcement. In terms of the latest economic data, industrial production figures for February were just released. They showed an increase of 0.1%, which is slightly stronger than the flat reading that had been expected. Capacity utilization for the month hit 72.7%, which is essentially on par with the 72.5% rate that was widely anticipated.
[BRIEFING.COM] S&P futures vs fair value: -6.00. Nasdaq futures vs fair value: -5.00. U.S. stock futures remain under moderate pressure. Meanwhile, Europe's major bourses are essentially flat as Germany's DAX trades along the neutral line. Advancing issues, led by Siemens (SI), have only a slight edge over declinging issues, of which Deutsche Telekom is a primary laggard. Advancers and decliners are currently in perfect balance in France's CAC, which is down 0.1%. Sanofi-Aventis (SNY) is a primary leader, but Societe Generale is a chief laggard. Meanwhile, Britain's FTSE is down 0.1%. Oil plays are strong as BP PLC (BP) and Royal Dutch Shell (RDS.A) trade higher, but mining issues Rio Tinto (RTP), Xstrata, BHP Billiton (BHP), and Anglo American are weak. Headlines continue to come out of Europe regarding a potential bailout for Greece. According to Dow Jones, recent media reports suggest that the EU's 27 finance ministers could sign off on a bailout plan worth 20 billion euros to 25 billion euros at a meeting on Tuesday, but details of the aid package remain unclear. In Asia, the MSCI Asia Pacific Index slipped 0.4%, while Japan's Nikkei closed unchanged. Some exporters were helped by a weaker yen, but profit-taking among other names acted as a counterbalance. JVC Kenwood Holdings slumped after restating earnings from past years. It now estimates an operating loss of 9.0 billion yen for its current fiscal year. Still, Canon (CAJ), Konica Minolta, and Toyota Motor (CAJ) were able to make gains. As had been expected, Japan recently upgraded its assessment of its economy for the first time in eight months, according to reports. In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng slipped 0.6%. China Shenhua Energy retreated after reporting a quarterly profit that was below expectations. China Merchants Bank slid, despite strong interest in its rights issue. China Taiping Insurance fell after it entered into an agreement to sell Ming An Insurance. In mainland China, the Shanghai Composite closed 1.2% lower. Concerns that the country's central bank will tighten monetary policy persist.
[BRIEFING.COM] S&P futures vs fair value: -6.00. Nasdaq futures vs fair value: -4.00. The Empire Manufacturing Report for March came in with a reading of 22.9, which is better than the 22.0 that was widely forecast, but not quite as strong as the 24.9 that had been posted for February. Stock futures have shown virtually no reaction to the numbers. Still to come, though, are the latest industrial production and capacity utilization data at 9:15 AM ET.
[BRIEFING.COM] S&P futures vs fair value: -7.00. Nasdaq futures vs fair value: -4.00. Stock futures are lower in early trading, with a stronger dollar and modest losses in most major overseas markets weighing on U.S. stocks and commodities. In stock-specific news, Google (GOOG) is trading roughly 2% lower in premarket action amid reports that it may be close to shutting down its Chinese search engine. Chinese Internet company Baidu.com (BIDU) is seen as a beneficiary of this news and its shares are trading up 3.5% ahead of the opening bell. There are a couple of economic reports coming up with the release of an Empire Manufacturing report at 8:30 ET, followed by Industrial Production and Capacity Utilization data at 9:15 ET.
[BRIEFING.COM] S&P futures vs fair value: -7.70. Nasdaq futures vs fair value: -6.00.
[BRIEFING.COM] FTSE...5611...-15.40...-0.30%. DAX...5936.3...-8.90...-0.10%.
[BRIEFING.COM] Nikkei...10751.9...+0.70...+0.00%. Hang Seng...21079.1...-130.60...-0.60%.
[BRIEFING.COM] Stocks set a fractionally improved 52-week high in the early going, but then spent the rest of the session stuck in a choppy sideways trade as a disappointing consumer sentiment survey weighed on the mood of participants.
Momentum from four straight gains helped position stocks for a positive start this morning. A weaker dollar also helped -- it traded with a marked loss for the entire session as the euro and British pound garnered support amid news that industrial production in Europe spiked a sharper-than-expected 1.7% in January. A recommendation from analysts at Goldman Sachs to buy the euro also helped the currency. The dollar closed down 0.6%.
The positive mood in early action was further supported by a 0.3% increase in retail sales and a 0.8% increase in sales less autos during February, according to the latest Advance Retail Sales Report. Economists had expected a decline of 0.2% for total retail sales and a 0.1% increase in sales less autos for February.
However, the tone of trade was subdued by the University of Michigan's preliminary Consumer Sentiment Survey for March. It came in at 72.5, which was below the 74.0 that had been expected. Disappointment over the survey led participants to ignore a flat business inventory reading for January.
Corporate headlines did little to spur interest in the broader market. Among blue chips, Pfizer (PFE 17.08, -0.21) announced that two of its drugs failed to meet their endpoints in a study and that it has ended a late-stage trial for another drug. Pfizer weighed on the Dow for the entire session.
Fellow Dow component United Technologies (UTX 71.53, -0.51) reaffirmed its fiscal 2010 earnings outlook, which failed to provide much of a cushion relative to Wall Street's consensus forecast.
National Semiconductor (NSM 14.38, +0.04) served up better-than-expected earnings and an upside forecast, but that did little for the overall semiconductor space, which finished with a collective loss of 0.5%.
On the other hand, retailers gained 0.6% as Aeropostale (ARO 28.18, +1.13) provided leadership after the apparel retailer reported better-than-expected earnings and issued a strong forecast of its own.
Commodities saw mixed interest this session. In turn, the CRB Commodity Index finished flat. However, oil prices fell a considerable 1.1% to $81.24 per barrel. Oil prices had actually eclipsed $83 per barrel in the early going as news circulated that the International Energy Agency (IEA) expects oil demand to rise this year.
The flat finish among both commodities and stocks marked an anticlimactic close to this week's trade, though action in previous sessions combined for a considerable weekly move. The CRB Commodity Index fell 1.3% this week, while stocks settled with a 1.0% weekly gain.
Advancing Sectors: Industrials (+0.7%), Materials (+0.6%), Consumer Discretionary (+0.2%), Tech (+0.1%)
..Nasdaq 100 +0.00%. ..S&P Midcap 400 +0.2%. ..Russell 2000 -0.1%.
Declining Sectors: Utilities (-0.7%), Financials (-0.4%), Health Care (-0.4%); Telecom (-0.2%), Energy (-0.1%)
Unchanged: Consumer Staples