DAILY STOCKMARKET REPORT 27 May 2009
|
FTSE 100 |
4411.72, +46.43 |
Dow |
8473.49, +196.17 |
|
FTSE 250 |
7530.02, -11.45 |
Nasdaq |
1750.43, +58.42 |
|
FTSE All Share |
2247.79, +19.81 |
S&P 500 |
910.33, +23.33 |
|
Nikkei |
9438.77, +127.96 |
Hang Seng |
17886.60, +895.04 |
|
Oil (Crude) |
$62.45 |
Gold |
$953.30 |
|
Base Rate |
0.5% |
10 Yr Gilt |
3.69% |
|
£/$ |
1.598 |
£/€ |
1.1442 |
|
1 month LIBOR |
0.677 |
3 month LIBOR |
1.279 |
Markets
New York - US stocks rebounded from a four day losing streak yesterday after a report showed consumer confidence hit an eight month high. The Conference Board showed its index measuring the level of confidence had its biggest monthly gain in six years from 40.8 to 54.9, against expectations of a rise to just 42. The data also meant investors largely dismissed the S&P/CaseShiller Home Price Index which showed a record 19.1% drop in the first quarter.
The Dow Jones rallied 196.17 points to close at 8,473.49 while the S&P 500 jumped 23.33 points to end at 910.33. The Nasdaq surged 58.42 points to finish at 1,750.43.
Apple boosted the Nasdaq and fellow technology shares after Morgan Stanley upgraded its rating and raised its price target on the stock. The brokerage cited Apple’s iPhone as a driver for strong earnings growth over the next two years. Shares in the company gained 6.8%, topping the Nasdaq.
Gains were broad based among stock, with consumer discretionary shares among the top performers. McDonalds Corp added 3.1% wile retailer Macy’s Inc advanced 5.9%.
US light crude oil for July delivery climbed $0.68 to $62.45 a barrel. COMEX gold for June delivery slid $5.60 to $953.30 an ounce. Treasury prices fell, raising the yield on the 10 year note to 3.51% from 3.46%.
Tokyo - The Nikkei rose 127.96 points to close at 9,438.77 this morning. Stocks were boosted by news that Nikon Corp will cut jobs to stem losses and speculation that the nation’s property market has bottomed out.
Hong Kong - The Hang Seng is currently 895.04 points higher at 17,886.60. Stocks surged higher after the government unveiled a HK$16.8 billion of tax cuts, fee waivers and spending to spur growth.
London - The FTSE 100 is currently 25.60 points higher at 4,437.32, continue its 46 point gain from yesterday following the strong consumer data from the US. Gains are broad based with Home Retail leading the risers board, up 4.7%. The improving mood among investors helps lift financials and miners, with Lloyds gaining 3% while Anglo American adds 2.6%. Three stocks trading without the right to the next dividend as of today top the fallers’ board. Next slips 2.4%, Cobham loses 2.3% and Marks & Spencer fall 2.1%.
Economics
US Existing home sales (Apr) 15:00 BST/ 10:00 EDT
Pending home sales rose 3.2% in March, after a 2% increase in February. Given the Beige Book report of stabilising housing-market conditions in some districts, we expect to see existing home sales rise to 4.75m, which would be an increase of nearly 4%. The improvement could be focused in the South and the Midwest, where pending home sales are up 8% year-on-year in each region.
US FHFA house price index (Mar/Q1) 15:00 BST/ 10:00 EDT
The FHFA house price index has risen for the past two months, up 1% in January and 0.7% in February. The latest daily Radar Logic data suggest that home prices have been relatively stable since the beginning of the year. We look for the March FHFA index to fall 0.6%. For Q1 as a whole, this should translate into a rise of around 0.5%, which would be the first quarterly increase since Q2 2007
Corporate
British photographic retailer Jessops today reported a wider loss in the first half, and said although it was working to save the business, shareholders were unlikely to receive any return. The retailer posted a loss before non-recurring items and tax of £5.9 million for the six months to end-March, against a £2.9 million loss for the same period a year ago. Like-for-like sales fell 4.5 percent in the period, the retailer said, although trading in the eight weeks to 24 May had been encouraging, with like-for-like sales down 3.6 percent against an 8 percent fall in the same period a year ago. The group closed another 21 stores in the first half, leaving it with 211, and cut its head office staff by 50 to 125.
The above details are provided for information only and are not intended to be construed a solicitation for the sale or purchase of any particular investment nor as specific investment advice.
If you would like to make a comment to be published about this article, please do so below. Alternatively, if you would like to discuss this article with Dominic you can call him on 0113 280 2037 or write to him at dominic.key@luptonfawcett.com or visit http://www.luptonfawcett.com/amd/ for further details.
Posted: May 27th, 2009 under Asset Management.
Comments: none
Print this post

Write a comment