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MarketView
Events defining the day's trading activity on Wall Street
Lauren Rudd
Friday, May 9, 2008
Summary Trading on Wall Street continued to follow the
pattern of up one day and down the next with declining share prices
taking the lead on Friday as the price of oil set another record and
concerns regarding the financial sector continued
after American International
Group reported a massive loss after the close on Thursday. All three
major equity indexes ended the week lower: The Dow was down 2.4
percent for the week, the NASDAQ fell 1.3 percent and the S&P 500
was down 1.8 percent. The NASDAQ fell less than the other indexes. Its
losses were kept in check by stronger-than-expected earnings from
Activision and upbeat comments on Nvidia. Activision shares ended the
day up $3.94, or 14.22 percent, to close at $31.64, while Nvidia's stock
closed up 58 cents, or 2.64 percent, at $22.53. AIG's dismal results raised doubts that the end of
the credit crisis was near. The world's largest insurer wrote down
assets linked to subprime mortgages and said it would need to raise
$12.5 billion to boost its balance sheet. Its shares ended the day down
$3.87, or 8.77 percent, to close at $40.28. AIG was the heaviest drag on
both the Dow Jones industrial average and the S&P 500. Also in the
financial area, Citigroup has made it clear that it intends to shed
roughly $400 billion of non-core assets in a bid to become more
competitive. Citigroup’s shares ended the day down 67 cents, or 2.76
percent, to close at $23.63. Oil rose above $126 a barrel, raising concerns over
the possibility that inflation will continue to rise and worries that
consumers will pare back their spending as higher prices at the pump cut
into discretionary income. Oil has risen sharply since slipping as low
as $110.53 per barrel on May 1. Speculators have seized on disruptions
to crude oil supplies in the North Sea and Strong demand for diesel fuel in The steady rise in crude oil prices once again has
turned the spotlight OPEC, which for months has insisted it has no
control over the factors it blames for pushing up the price of oil,
including speculation and the weak U.S. dollar. Despite the rise in oil, Exxon Mobil was among the
day’s losers on both the Dow and the S&P 500, most likely as a result of
profit-taking. Exxon closed down $1.11, or 1.23 percent, at $88.82. Pharmaceutical companies added to the gloomy picture.
Mylan posted a wider loss, while Bristol Myers fell on the threat of
generic competition in A record drop in domestic imports because of slowing
domestic demand took a big bite out of the trade deficit in March
despite record high oil prices. The trade gap shrank 5.7 percent in
March to $58.2 billion, the Commerce Department reported; a figure was
considerably smaller than expected.
Will Bank of
Countrywide Financial saw its share price fall nearly
6 percent on Friday on renewed speculation that Bank of America will
renegotiate or cancel its agreement to buy the largest Bank of America also spooked investors last week by
saying it had not decided whether to guarantee all of Countrywide's
debt. Friedman, Billings, Ramsey analyst Paul Miller wrote to clients on
Monday that Bank of America should walk away from the merger. With put options overwhelming call options by over 7
to 1, the thought is that the increase in put activity is due to
persistent conjecture in the market that Bank of America may either
secure a lower price for its Countrywide takeover, take on less
Countrywide debt, or walk away from the deal completely.
Outlook is not good say Goldman Sachs Goldman Sachs economists expect a total of $500
billion in residential mortgage credit losses, a renewed slowdown in
economic activity after the near-term boost from fiscal stimulus, and no
monetary policy tightening in 2008 or 2009, according to a research note
from the firm. Despite a setback in recent days, many financial
market indicators have recovered substantially since the Bear
Stearns/JPMorgan Chase & Co deal in mid-March, Goldman Sachs chief "Excess supply in the housing market is still
growing; home prices are already falling at rates that are very rapid by
the standards of previous housing downturns around the world; and "Ultimately, a painful adjustment needs to take
place, certainly in the housing and credit markets and likely in the
broader economy as well," Hatzius wrote. Even if the shock is moderate, it can have large
multiplier effects if it reduces the equity capital of highly leveraged
financial institutions that mark their balance sheets to market, he
said. Although the leveraged losses story sounds dire, its implications
for the Reduced selling pressure or outright purchases of
beaten-down assets will eventually support asset prices, this will push
down leverage, and the resulting balance sheet relaxation will
facilitate further asset purchases. "This means that good news can continue to feed on
itself," he wrote, with "positive spillover effects on sentiment and
activity in the broader economy." Still, the increase in mortgage credit defaults is
large and has further to go and the "locus of pain" tied to losses
related to further mortgage credit defaults is likely to shift away from
subprime mortgages, where the markets are already discounting very large
losses, to other residential mortgage debt, including prime mortgages.
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MarketView for May 9
MarketView for Friday May 9