Wall Street closed out its best week in a year on Friday, snapping back from a long stretch of selling, as investors looked ahead to what many expect will be a solid earnings season. Stocks ended near the day's highs, but trading was thin. Just 6.197 billion shares traded on the New York Stock Exchange, the American Stock Exchange and Nasdaq, making it the lowest-volume day of the year.
-- Google rises as China renews license, helping Nasdaq
-- Johnson & Johnson shares down on drug recalls
Google Inc helped lift the Nasdaq, rising 2.4 percent to $467.46 after Beijing gave the company the green light to continue operating its China Internet search page. US-listed shares of rival Baidu Inc fell 1.7 percent to $71.20. The major stock indexes advanced 5 percent in the holiday-shortened week, as investors put a string of dismal data behind them to focus on what is expected to be another solid quarter for corporate results.
"We expect to see good margins, very healthy balance sheets and companies basically saying that even with the slowdown, we are very well prepared for it," said Marc Pado, US strategist at Cantor Fitzgerald & Co in San Francisco. "We have been seeing from previous data that companies are not building inventory and not adding workers. In other words, they are very well positioned for the worst case scenario," Pado said. The Dow Jones industrial average was up 59.04 points, or 0.58 percent, at 10,198.03. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index was up 7.70 points, or 0.72 percent, at 1,077.95. The Nasdaq Composite Index was up 21.05 points, or 0.97 percent, at 2,196.45.
The earnings season unofficially begins with Alcoa Inc after the closing bell on Monday. Analysts are expecting overall second-quarter earnings to grow by 27 percent, according to Thomson Reuters data. This is up from the 22.4 percent that analysts were anticipating at the beginning of the year. Alcoa, the first Dow component to report, is expected to swing to a second-quarter profit, though falling aluminium prices have prompted analysts to cut their estimates on the stock.
The S&P 500 rose for a fourth straight day, up 5.4 percent this week, its best week since mid-July 2009. But the index is still down about 11.7 percent from its most recent closing high in late April. The Dow rose 5.3 percent and the Nasdaq advanced 5 percent this week.
Johnson & Johnson was the biggest drag on the Dow, falling 1.4 percent to $60.54 a day after it recalled more Tylenol and other over-the-counter drugs following consumer complaints of odors. The move expands a recall started in January. In addition to Alcoa, companies reporting next week include J.P. Morgan Chase & Co, Bank of America Corp and General Electric Co.
Banks will be scrutinised by investors concerned about delinquencies and loan demand to gauge the sustainability of a recent improvement in credit quality. Thursday raised its hostile bid for rival Airgas Inc by 5.8 percent to $5.3 billion, but the offer remained slightly below the company's current market value.
Air Products rose 1.4 percent to $69.74, while Airgas rose 1.6 percent to $64.90. In economic news, US wholesale sales fell unexpectedly in May, lifting inventories to their highest level in 11 months, a government report showed. Analysts said a slackening in demand could lead businesses to try to curb the inventory buildup, weighing on economic growth.
Recent US data showing slowing growth in the services and manufacturing sector, weakness in housing and a stagnating jobs market also worried investors, although most say it is too early to call a double-dip recession. The day's trading volume fell well below last year's estimated daily average of 9.65 billion. Advancing stocks outnumbered declining ones on the NYSE by 2383 to 627 while on the Nasdaq, advancers beat decliners by 1979 to 642.
Comments
Comments are closed.