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MarketView
Events defining the day's trading activity on Wall Street
Lauren Rudd
Wednesday, April 18, 2012
Summary
The major equity indexes fell on
Wednesday, a day after Wall Street's best gains in a month, as
uninspiring earnings from tech bellwethers IBM and Intel gave investors
a reason to take profits. Chesapeake Energy was down 5.5 percent on the
day to $18.06 and was among the most actively traded stocks on the Big
Board after a Reuters report that CEO Aubrey K. McClendon did not
disclose loans of as much as $1.1 billion over the last three years
against his stake in thousands of the company's oil and natural gas
wells. IIBM and Intel were among the largest drags on the
Dow Jones Industrial Average. IBM missed its revenue forecast, while the
Street felt that Intel's results failed to make a "bull case" for the
stock. IBM ended the day down 3.5 percent to close at $200.13 while
Intel fell 1.8 percent to close at $27.95. The lackluster reports from
the two technology heavyweights came at the start of what has so far
been a strong earnings season. After the closing bell, shares of Qualcomm fell 3.3
percent to $64.77 as the chipmaker provided a disappointing quarterly
and full-year outlook. In contrast, shares of eBay were up 7.6 percent
to $38.60 in extended-hours trading following the release of its
results, which topped expectations. In the regular session, among other declining stocks
were Berkshire Hathaway's Class B shares, which ended the day down 1.3
percent to close at $79.74 a day after Buffett said he has cancer. On
Tuesday, Buffett said that he has Stage 1 prostate cancer that "is not
remotely life-threatening or even debilitating in any meaningful way." A bright spot in the tech space, Yahoo gained 3.2
percent to $15.49, a day after reporting that quarterly revenues rose -
marking Yahoo's first quarterly sales growth in three years, as the new
CEO outlined plans to revamp the struggling Internet media company. Other advancers included Halliburton, up 4.6 percent
at $34.17, after the company said North American revenue reached a
record high. In contrast, shares of Genworth Financial slid 23.8 percent
to $5.87 after the life and mortgage insurer pushed back the initial
public offering of an Australian unit. Eighty percent of S&P 500 companies are exceeding
earnings estimates so far, with results in from 66 companies. Volume was lighter than average with about 5.95
billion shares changing hands on the three major equity exchanges, a
number that was below this year's daily average of 6.67 billion shares.
Spain’s Crisis Gets Worse
Spain's government met regional officials on
Wednesday to agree ways to cut state healthcare, an attack on a
treasured welfare system that will fuel anger among a population weary
of EU-enforced austerity to tackle a ballooning deficit. The conservative government has warned that the
populace would have to start paying more for prescriptions, part of the
welfare system that has provided state-financed health and education
since the country's transition to democracy began in the 1970s. Although protests against cuts have been mostly
peaceful and polls show that many Spaniards are resigned to reining in
costs to fight the debt crisis, violent flashes during a recent national
general strike may suggest patience is wearing thin. "It's time we end the culture of everything for
free," Industry Minister Jose Manuel Soria told Spanish state television
when asked whether the government planned to force pensioners to pay for
medicines. Despite promises to not touch the welfare state
before an election in November last year, the conservatives say they
have been forced into a U-turn on health and education and must save 10
billion euros ($13.14 billion) this year. Health Minister Ana Mato met regional leaders in
Madrid on Wednesday to decide on how best to reform the system. Some
media said pensioners, who receive free medicines, would have to pay 10
percent of their drugs bills while people with jobs would have to pay
50-60 percent, depending on income. On Monday, Education Minister Jose Ignacio Wert said
classroom sizes would increase by up to 20 percent and the number of
teachers' working hours would also rise. The estimated savings - 3 billion euros a year in
state schools and 7 billion euros in the health service - are set to be
approved at the government's weekly meeting on Friday. Spain is once again at the center of the euro zone
debt crisis on concerns that Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy is unable to
control the highly devolved regions' spending and deflate one the bloc's
highest public deficits. Spain's central government may intervene in regional
finances in return for financing help as soon as next month if they do
not meet the tough line needed to help allay fears over the country's
debt, a high ranking source said. Rajoy's fight against regional debt could become as
symbolic as British former prime minister Margaret Thatcher's crushing
of trade unions in 1980s, Goldman Sachs said in an investors note. It
said it expected a final 2012 deficit of 6.7 percent of GDP and warned
against short term measures. "While the Spanish government may have a genuine
intention to implement reforms, it needs to become more effective in
enacting them and articulate a strategy that looks beyond the near
term," it said. Investor concerns over the euro zone's fourth
largest economy, soothed by a trillion euros of cheap liquidity from the
European Central Bank, were set on edge in March after Rajoy tore up the
deficit target agreed with European partners. The cost of financing 10-year Spanish debt jumped to
5-month highs on Monday, close to the unsustainable levels, while the
cost of insuring against default hit highs, though market pressure eased
after a successful auction on Tuesday. Spain's 17 autonomous regions control their
healthcare and education budgets and the conservatives say reform is
necessary after they overspent in 2011. The healthcare system faces some
15 billion euros in unpaid debts, the conservatives say. Public health spending was $3,067 per capita in
2009, below an average of $3,361 per capita in the OECD club of wealthy
nations, based on the latest available data. "Health spending has a significant impact on the
regions and the reform is part of current efforts to reach the goal of
making public finances sustainable," Economy Secretary Fernando Jimenez
Latorre told parliament. Spain has said it will reduce its public shortfall,
which hit 8.5 percent of gross domestic product last year, to 5.3
percent of GDP this year and 3 percent in 2013. However, many economists say this will be impossible
as the economy slips into its second recession since 2009 and families
and businesses rein in spending to pay down debt despite the central
government committing to 27 billion euros of savings in the 2012 budget.
($1 = 0.7610 euros)
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MarketView for April 18
MarketView for Wednesday, April 18