
sell the gain, dun be greedy, the correction is still not done. furthermore with wars, oil and bird flu around, it is safer to be in the cash.
Do note that the market has rarely face so many potential crisis in the market at the same time.
This is something you should note.
Dow up 100 points now! Yes, bring back the Spanish bull!
Hopefully there is a year end rally if today's report in business times comes true
Dow up 50 points and Nasdaq down 3 points at opening bell .... Shiok or what!
Hmmm ... maybe Ben Bernanke should take MC today!
INDICATIONS
Futures lean lower as Yahoo, CPI weigh
J.P. Morgan Chase provides a lift; Bernanke testimony awaited
By Steve Goldstein & Tomi Kilgore, MarketWatch
Last Update: 9:01 AM ET Jul 19, 2006
Dow Closes Up 52, Nasdaq Finishes Up 6
Tuesday July 18, 7:10 pm ET
By Christopher Wang, AP Business Writer
Dow Ends Up 52 at 10,799, Nasdaq Ends Up 6 at 2,043 on Late-Day Rally That Calms Investors
Tuesday July 18, 7:10 pm ET
By Christopher Wang, AP Business Writer
NEW YORK (AP) -- A late-day rally gave stocks a moderate advance Tuesday as a second day of sharply lower oil prices calmed investors uncertain about the direction of interest rates.
Better-than-expected earnings from Coca-Cola Co. and United Technologies Corp. propped up the Dow Jones industrials, while mild wholesale inflation data also lent some support to the market. But concerns about conflict in the Middle East made investors uneasy about buying: Stocks spent most of the session lower before recovering late in the day.
John Forelli, portfolio manager for Independence Investments, said traders were bracing for Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke's appearance before Congress Wednesday.
"It's the first time in a while I can remember that we were within three weeks of a Fed meeting and Fed fund futures were 50-50," Forelli said, meaning the market is divided on whether the central bank will boost interest rates when it meets Aug. 8. "Bernanke tomorrow could be a linchpin for a rally or continued malaise in the trading range we've seen."
While a modest rise in core producer price index helped the inflation picture, analysts said the stronger-than-forecast gain in overall PPI raised the possibility of more rate hikes from the Fed and also unnerved the bond market. Downbeat housing data renewed fears about an economic slowdown.
The Dow climbed 51.87, or 0.48 percent, to 10,799.23, after sinking as much as 63 points earlier.
Broader stock indicators also recouped early declines. The Standard & Poor's 500 index gained 2.37, or 0.19 percent, to 1,236.86, and the Nasdaq composite index rose 5.50, or 0.27 percent, to 2,043.22.
Advancing issues overtook decliners by 6 to 5 on the New York Stock Exchange. Stocks barely budged Monday amid nervousnous about buying following sharp losses last week, Wall Street's worst in 2006.
However, the rise in overall PPI had the bond market worried about inflation weakening the value of fixed-income investments. The yield on the 10-year Treasury jumped to 5.14 percent from 5.07 percent late Monday.
In economic news, the Labor Department said PPI grew 0.5 percent in June, ahead of estimates for a 0.3 percent rise. Core PPI -- excluding volatile energy and food costs -- increased 0.2 percent to meet analyst expectations.
Meanwhile, the National Association of Home Builders said its index of new home sales slumped 3 points to 39 in July -- a 15-year low -- citing pressure from higher lending costs.
The day's data reinforced Wall Street's anxiety about the economy. Although recent reports have provided evidence of slowing economic growth, rising inflation from persistently high oil prices could prompt the Fed to keep boosting interest rates -- and potentially trigger an economic downturn.
That comes as central banks worldwide are also lifting rates to contain inflation, which would curb global demand and foreign investments as money becomes more expensive to borrow. On Wednesday, Bernanke's speech and the latest reading of the Labor Deprtment's consumer price index could lead stocks sharply in either direction.
"I think the key is going to be the monetary policy situation," said Bill Strazzullo of Bell Curve Trading. "Not just in the United States, but all over the world. We might be close to being done, but Japan is just getting started."
Tension in the Middle East sent crude futures soaring before trades locked in profits toward the end of the session. A barrel of light crude jumped to $76.55 but fell $1.76 to settle at $73.54 on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
Elsewhere, the U.S. dollar fell against the Japanese yen. Gold dropped to $630 an ounce.
Dow Coca-Cola said higher sales and overseas growth helped its profit gain 7 percent to beat targets by 2 cents per share. Coca-Cola climbed 85 cents to $43.55.
United Tech, also a Dow component, said its profit grew 14 percent as demand for aerospace products offset weakness at its Carrier heating unit. United Tech advanced 92 cents to $58.88.
Johnson & Johnson weighed on the Dow, slumping 31 cents to $60.60 despite a 9 percent jump in earnings on record sales and less marketing and overhead costs.
Merrill Lynch & Co.'s earnings swelled 42 percent on solid trading activity despite the second-quarter downturn in the markets. Merrill Lynch nonetheless slid 77 cents to $67.50.
Japan's market fell for a fifth straight session to a one-month low, with the Nikkei stock average sinking 2.75 percent amid worries about the violence in the Middle East. Britain's FTSE 100 lost 0.34 percent, Germany's DAX index fell 0.37 percent and France's CAC-40 was lower by 0.33 percent.
Final consolidated volume on the NYSE was 2.62 billion shares, compared with 2.3 billion shares that changed hands Monday.
The Russell 2000 index of smaller companies gained 3.95, or 0.58 percent, to 681.64.
Better-than-expected earnings from Coca-Cola Co. and United Technologies Corp. propped up the Dow Jones industrials, while mild wholesale inflation data also lent some support to the market. But concerns about conflict in the Middle East made investors uneasy about buying: Stocks spent most of the session lower before recovering late in the day.
John Forelli, portfolio manager for Independence Investments, said traders were bracing for Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke's appearance before Congress Wednesday.
"It's the first time in a while I can remember that we were within three weeks of a Fed meeting and Fed fund futures were 50-50," Forelli said, meaning the market is divided on whether the central bank will boost interest rates when it meets Aug. 8. "Bernanke tomorrow could be a linchpin for a rally or continued malaise in the trading range we've seen."
While a modest rise in core producer price index helped the inflation picture, analysts said the stronger-than-forecast gain in overall PPI raised the possibility of more rate hikes from the Fed and also unnerved the bond market. Downbeat housing data renewed fears about an economic slowdown.
The Dow climbed 51.87, or 0.48 percent, to 10,799.23, after sinking as much as 63 points earlier.
Broader stock indicators also recouped early declines. The Standard & Poor's 500 index gained 2.37, or 0.19 percent, to 1,236.86, and the Nasdaq composite index rose 5.50, or 0.27 percent, to 2,043.22.
Advancing issues overtook decliners by 6 to 5 on the New York Stock Exchange. Stocks barely budged Monday amid nervousnous about buying following sharp losses last week, Wall Street's worst in 2006.
However, the rise in overall PPI had the bond market worried about inflation weakening the value of fixed-income investments. The yield on the 10-year Treasury jumped to 5.14 percent from 5.07 percent late Monday.
In economic news, the Labor Department said PPI grew 0.5 percent in June, ahead of estimates for a 0.3 percent rise. Core PPI -- excluding volatile energy and food costs -- increased 0.2 percent to meet analyst expectations.
Meanwhile, the National Association of Home Builders said its index of new home sales slumped 3 points to 39 in July -- a 15-year low -- citing pressure from higher lending costs.
The day's data reinforced Wall Street's anxiety about the economy. Although recent reports have provided evidence of slowing economic growth, rising inflation from persistently high oil prices could prompt the Fed to keep boosting interest rates -- and potentially trigger an economic downturn.
That comes as central banks worldwide are also lifting rates to contain inflation, which would curb global demand and foreign investments as money becomes more expensive to borrow. On Wednesday, Bernanke's speech and the latest reading of the Labor Deprtment's consumer price index could lead stocks sharply in either direction.
"I think the key is going to be the monetary policy situation," said Bill Strazzullo of Bell Curve Trading. "Not just in the United States, but all over the world. We might be close to being done, but Japan is just getting started."
Tension in the Middle East sent crude futures soaring before trades locked in profits toward the end of the session. A barrel of light crude jumped to $76.55 but fell $1.76 to settle at $73.54 on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
Elsewhere, the U.S. dollar fell against the Japanese yen. Gold dropped to $630 an ounce.
Dow Coca-Cola said higher sales and overseas growth helped its profit gain 7 percent to beat targets by 2 cents per share. Coca-Cola climbed 85 cents to $43.55.
United Tech, also a Dow component, said its profit grew 14 percent as demand for aerospace products offset weakness at its Carrier heating unit. United Tech advanced 92 cents to $58.88.
Johnson & Johnson weighed on the Dow, slumping 31 cents to $60.60 despite a 9 percent jump in earnings on record sales and less marketing and overhead costs.
Merrill Lynch & Co.'s earnings swelled 42 percent on solid trading activity despite the second-quarter downturn in the markets. Merrill Lynch nonetheless slid 77 cents to $67.50.
Japan's market fell for a fifth straight session to a one-month low, with the Nikkei stock average sinking 2.75 percent amid worries about the violence in the Middle East. Britain's FTSE 100 lost 0.34 percent, Germany's DAX index fell 0.37 percent and France's CAC-40 was lower by 0.33 percent.
Final consolidated volume on the NYSE was 2.62 billion shares, compared with 2.3 billion shares that changed hands Monday.
The Russell 2000 index of smaller companies gained 3.95, or 0.58 percent, to 681.64.
MARKET SNAPSHOT
Stocks end higher after volatile session
Course of Middle East conflict keeps Wall Street guessing; data unsettles
By Mark Cotton & Leslie Wines, MarketWatch
Last Update: 4:26 PM ET Jul 18, 2006
MARKET SNAPSHOT
Stock gains wilt on higher oil, rising bond yields
Target cuts July sales view, sending retailers in a tailspin
By Mark Cotton, MarketWatch
Last Update: 11:17 AM ET Jul 18, 2006
weak but sentiment is slowly rising. i think the market may be due for a rebound on aug. thus the golden phrase "go away on may and come back in aug" may be fulfilled.
Dow still weak....
thanks! I was about to post this too!
DOW is up on open ... as of now, its +27 points
MARKET SNAPSHOT
Earnings, data set to supply early lift
Target cuts July sales outlook; crude-oil prices rebound
By Mark Cotton, MarketWatch
Last Update: 9:16 AM ET Jul 18, 2006
some help from US to pressure Israel to said something nice oni.
Dow is up slightly last night and oil prices have fallen $2 !! Yeah!
NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Oil prices fell from record highs Monday, closing almost $2 lower, as violence between Israel and Lebanon-based Hezbollah did not expand as feared to neighboring oil-producing states.
U.S. light crude for August delivery slid $1.73 to settle at $75.30 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
Oil's record march stalls
Crude falls nearly $2 as Iran, Syria remain on sidelines of Israel-Hezbollah fight.
By Steve Hargreaves, CNNMoney.com staff writer
July 17 2006: 3:33 PM EDT
NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Oil prices fell from record highs Monday, closing almost $2 lower, as violence between Israel and Lebanon-based Hezbollah did not expand as feared to neighboring oil-producing states.
U.S. light crude for August delivery slid $1.73 to settle at $75.30 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
True ..... Sigh! We eat BK 2molo then.
Still relatively weak....
Stocks open higher; McDonald's boosts the Dow
By Mark Cotton
Last Update: 9:36 AM ET Jul 17, 2006
thats a surprise indeed! the Isreali stock exchange actually gained 0.1% today.
Surprise, surprise!!!
Dow and Nasdaq up GREEN at the opening bell .... Shiok or what! Let's see if it can hold for rest of the trading day.
Dow up 39 points, while Nasdaq up 7 points now.
MARKET SNAPSHOT
Middle East conflict set to weigh once more
Citigroup slips on earnings disappointment; McDonald gains
By Mark Cotton, MarketWatch
Last Update: 9:18 AM ET Jul 17, 2006