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MarketView
Events defining the day's trading activity on Wall Street
Lauren Rudd
Friday, October 5, 2012
Summary
The S&P 500 broke a four-day string of gains, ending
slightly lower on Friday as an unexpected drop in the U.S. unemployment
rate was overshadowed by concerns about the coming earnings season,
which begins with Alcoa next week. All three major equity indexes came
off session highs by the afternoon, with the S&P 500 index turning
negative for the first time this week, as Wall Street braced for weak
corporate results. The Nasdaq was pressured by Apple, which fell 2.1
percent to close at $652.59. S&P 500 earnings for the third quarter are forecast
to have fallen 2.4 percent from the year-ago period, which would be the
first decline in three years, according to Thomson Reuters data. Yet,
despite the lackluster performance for the day, the S&P 500 is still up
16.2 percent so far this year. The benchmark is on track for its best
yearly run since 2009 when stocks rebounded after the financial crisis. Most of the market's gains this year have been
prompted by easy monetary policies. The improvement in U.S. hiring last
month is one bright spot as manufacturing around the world has been
showing signs of softness in recent months. For the week, the Dow rose 1.3 percent, the S&P 500
advanced 1.4 percent and the Nasdaq added 0.6 percent. Alcoa will kick off the earnings period on Tuesday,
when the company is expected to report that it broke even, compared with
earnings of 15 cents a share a year ago. Alcoa ended the day up 0.2
percent to close at $9.07. Labor Department data indicated that the
unemployment rate fell by 0.3 percentage point in September to 7.8
percent, the lowest level for that economic statistic since January
2009. Investors focused on a survey of households that pointed to a
large surge in hiring. A separate survey of business establishments showed
employers added 114,000 jobs to their payrolls last month while data for
July and August was revised to show 86,000 more jobs created than
previously reported. Zynga ended the day down 11.9 percent to close at
$2.48 after the company reduced its 2012 outlook for a second time,
raising doubts with regard to the games maker's ability to shore up its
dwindling earnings. Facebook, which derives more than a tenth of its
revenue from fees paid by Zynga, lost 4.7 percent to $20.91. Sprint Nextel is considering making a rival bid for
MetroPCS Communications, which agreed on Wednesday to a merger with
Deutsche Telekom's T-Mobile USA, according to people familiar with the
situation. Sprint Nextel shares rose 2.2 percent to $5.20, while
MetroPCS lost 0.3 percent to $12.65. About 5.7 billion shares changed hands on the three
major equity exchanges, as compared to an average daily volume of 6.38
billion shares.
Unemployment Falls Sharply
The unemployment rate fell to 7.8 percent last
month, dropping below 8 percent for the first time in nearly four years
and giving President Barack Obama a potential boost with the election a
month away. The rate declined from 8.1 percent because the
number of people who said they were employed soared by 873,000 — an
encouraging sign for an economy that's been struggling to create enough
jobs. The number of unemployed Americans is now 12.1 million, the fewest
since January 2009. The Labor Department said employers added 114,000
jobs in September. It also said the economy created 86,000 more jobs in
July and August than the department had initially estimated. Wages rose in September. And more people started
looking for work. The revisions show employers added 146,000 jobs per
month from July through September, up from 67,000 in the previous three
months. The 7.8 percent unemployment rate for September
matches the rate in January 2009, when Obama took office. In the months
after Obama's inauguration, the rate rose sharply and had topped 8
percent for 43 straight months. The October jobs report will be released
only four days before Election Day. The job market has been improving, sluggishly but
steadily. Jobs have been added for 24 straight months. There are now
325,000 more than when Obama took office. The number of employed
Americans comes from a government survey of 60,000 households that
determines the unemployment rate. The government asks a series of questions, by phone
or in person, such as do you own a business? Did you work for pay? If
not, did you provide unpaid work for a family business or farm? (Those
who did are considered employed.) Afterward, the survey participants are asked whether
they had a job and, if so, whether it was full or part time. The
government's definition of unemployed is someone who's out of work and
has actively looked for a job in the past four weeks. The government also does a second survey of roughly
140,000 businesses to determine the number of jobs businesses created or
lost. The September job gains were led by the health care
industry, which added 44,000 jobs — the most since February.
Transportation and warehousing also showed large gains. The revisions
also showed that federal, state and local governments added 63,000 jobs
in July and August, compared with earlier estimates that showed losses. Still, many of the jobs the economy added last month
were part time. The number of people with part-time jobs who wanted
full-time work rose 7.5 percent to 8.6 million, the most since February
2009.
Housing Frustrates Fed A disappointing rebound within the housing industry
has that industry continuing to drag on the country's overall economic
recovery, two influential Federal Reserve officials said on Friday,
highlighting a corner of the economy that still frustrates the Fed. New York Federal Reserve Bank President William
Dudley said the housing market's failure to fully respond to the Fed's
easy money policies remains a headwind to U.S. growth, while Elizabeth
Duke, a governor at the central bank, highlighted problems associated to
the "extraordinary" level of abandoned properties. A bubble in the U.S. housing market was at the core
of the 2007-2009 financial crises and the lackluster environment that
continues to hamper the world economy today. Although housing prices
have edged up this year, Dudley said credit availability remains
"impaired" and the overall pace of the broader U.S. economic recovery
has been disappointing. "While there are several headwinds that have been
restraining economic growth, a key impediment is that the housing market
has failed to respond fully to the significant easing of monetary
policy," Dudley said at a residential real estate conference hosted by
the New York Fed. The Fed has kept benchmark interest rates at an
ultra-low level for nearly four years and has bought up more than $2
trillion in assets to kick-start growth and get Americans back to work.
It launched a third round of asset buying last month and signaled it
would keep rates near zero for three more years. The consensus of opinion appeared to be that the
housing market had finally begun to rebound as prices began to stabilize
last August. Although home sales were near two-year highs in August, the
industry is still facing a large overhang of foreclosures and the many
people remain underwater on their home mortgages. Dudley, who as head of the powerful New York Fed
bank has a permanent vote on monetary policy, said "various housing
market indicators have looked somewhat better of late," including home
prices. However, he also said the absolute level of housing starts
remains low and housing market conditions vary across the country,
causing problems. "The
net result is that while housing's contribution to growth has finally
turned positive, its magnitude is far below that experienced in previous
recoveries," Dudley said. In a speech that dug into the details of where and
why homes became vacant, Duke identified three broad categories that
described most concentrations of abandoned U.S. homes: post-housing boom
neighborhoods, poorer inner city districts, and less-obvious suburban
communities in prolonged decline. "Doubtless there will be costs associated with
solving these problems, but it is important to also consider the costs
of doing nothing," Duke said at the same conference, citing lost
tax-revenue and the cost of demolition. Among the fallout from the burst housing bubble are
the many abandoned properties that continue to inflict heavy costs on
the wider community which may warrant government aid to ease the
problem, she argued. "In order to see the robust economic recovery we all
want, we need to deal effectively with the large volume of vacant and
distressed properties throughout the country," said Duke, one of the
seven presidentially appointed Fed governors who have permanent votes on
monetary policy. Although unsold home inventory levels have declined
as real estate has picked up, the number of abandoned homes remains
stubbornly high, she noted.
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MarketView for October 5
MarketView for Friday, October 5