North American stocks point up
RTGAM
After the dramatic sell-off on Tuesday, North American investors appear to be ready to creep back in to the stock market, if futures activity is any indication. S&P 500 futures indicated a 4.4-point rise on Wednesday, to about 1348. Dow Jones industrial average futures indicated a 27-point rise, to about 12,347.
Good results from Walt Disney Co., which beat analyst expectations, could explain part of the rise. The shares rose in Germany. But investors may be ready to buy stocks that are deemed to be cheap following the widespread decline in North American stocks on Tuesday that left few sectors untouched.
In European trading in the afternoon, stocks were a mixed bad. The U.K.'s FTSE 100 was down 0.3 per cent and Germany's DAX index was up 0.4 per cent. However, investors will have to weigh overnight selling in Asia, with the Nikkei 225 plummeted 4.7 per cent, its worst one-day decline since January 22.
"The chitchat from Tokyo-side is that investors are scared about Japan's economy, they are scared about the U.S. economic slowdown - which should pinch profits at Japan's exporters of consumer goods and vehicles - and they are scared in general," said Carl Weinberg, chief economist at High Frequency Economics, in a note to clients. "What scares us - and what we believe makes the Nikkei's situation even worse than it needs to be - is that the huge overhang of foreign investor positions, that has supported this stock market over the last four years, could liquidate in a heartbeat."
In Canada, investors are likely to follow the U.S. lead but will also have an eye on a number of important earnings releases, including quarterly reports from BCE Inc., Cameco Corp. and Saputo Inc.
Copyright 2001 The Globe and Mail
Wednesday, February 6, 2008
North American stocks point up
Tuesday, February 5, 2008
Markets Are A Roller Coaster
"R" word no longer disguised
RTGAM
You can't say there were no warning signs in the dramatic stock market selloff on Tuesday. If the earlier European downturn wasn't proof enough that investors are growing more skittish about a U.S. recession and its impact on the rest of the world, there was the morning's non-manufacturing index from the U.S. Institute for Supply Management that took the formerly disguised "R" word, spelled it out, underlined it and highlighted it in red.
By the time the selling had ended, major North American stock market indexes had skidded between 2 and 3 per cent, for their worst showing in 11 months. The S&P/TSX composite index closed at 12,931.95, down 326.21 points or 2.5 per cent. The Dow Jones industrial average closed at 12,265.13, down 370.03 points or 2.9 per cent. All 30 stocks in the blue-chip index fell. And the broader S&P 500 closed at 1336.64, down 44.18 points or 3.2 per cent.
Stefane Marion, an economist at National Bank Financial, put things into perspective in a note to clients: "The all-important service sector which accounts for about three quarters of U.S. GDP (or 85 per cent of business sector output) and over two-thirds of payroll employment contracted for the first time in 58 months in January," he said. "This development adds to the evidence already provided by the January payroll data that the U.S. economic expansion has come to an end. Our current forecast is for U.S. real GDP to contract 1.3 per cent in the first half of 2008."
Tuesday's volatility, while high, is no record breaker - and even cautious investors might yawn at the declines. That is because recent stock market activity has been exceptionally volatile. The blog from Bespoke Investment Group does a nice job of quantifying this volatility by looking at the number of days when the S&P 500 has moved up or down by at least 1 per cent (which is generally considered a big move).
"Over the last 20 trading days, the S&P 500 has risen by at least 1 per cent seven times and declined by more than 1 per cent on eight occasions. This makes a total of fifteen 1 per cent days over a 20 day period," said the blog's writer. The blog item was posted at 12:38 p.m. EST, so there is no word on whether the tally included Tuesday's volatility.
In the link to the chart, you can see how unusual things are. There have been only a few occasions with this sort of volatility: the bear market of 2002, the dot-com downturn at the turn of the century and the recession of 1990.
Copyright 2001 The Globe and Mail
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