MARKET SNAPSHOT: U.S. Stocks Stage Dramatic Comeback As Banks Surge Anew
By Kate Gibson
U.S. stocks on Wednesday snapped a six-session losing streak, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average bouncing back from a 325-point deficit to end nearly 300 points ahead, as investors rushed into financial issues and bet on another rate cut by the Federal Reserve.
The embattled financial sector, which also traded well Tuesday after the Fed slashed rates in an emergency move, accelerated its advance late Wednesday on " what the Fed did yesterday and prospects for next week," said Peter Boockvar, equity strategist at Miller Tabak.
The Dow (DJI) closed up 299 points, or 2.5%, at 12,270.2, with 26 of its 30 components ending in the green.
Also bolstering financials was the hope that struggling bond insurers might be saved through acquisitions or cash infusions orchestrated by regulators. .
The market was "dramatically oversold" and due for a counter-trend bounce, said Boockvar.
After days of declines, equities turned after what Boockvar said was " certainly not the bottom but a temporary bottom."
The S&P 500 Index (SPX) climbed 28.10 points, or 2.1%, to 1,338.60, with the technology-heavy Nasdaq Composite Index (RIXF) gaining 24.14 points, or 1.1%, to 2,316.41.
On the New York Mercantile Exchange, crude futures fell $2.22 to end at $86.99 a barrel, while gold futures were also down, closing off $7.20 at $883.10 an ounce. .
Volume on the New York Stock Exchange topped 2.8 billion shares, with advancing stocks outpacing those declining nearly 3 to 1. On the Nasdaq, more than 3.6 billion shares traded hands, and advancing stocks outran those declining almost 2 to 1.
Treasury rally
Wall Street's slump fueled a rally in the Treasury market, with the benchmark 10-year note up 1 8/32 to 105 14/32 and its yield (TNX) dropping to 3.583%. .
In currency trading, the dollar gained on the euro and pound but slipped against Japan's yen. .
Stocks had extended losses much of Wednesday as worries of a global recession intensified after the European Central Bank dashed hopes for synchronized rate action following the Federal Reserve's emergency rate cut and Apple Inc.'s disappointing outlook.
"We are going to have a hard time holding this economy together, with or without the Fed's cuts," said Kevin Giddis, managing director, fixed income trading at Morgan Keegan & Co.
"The Fed has taken their best shot and the market is telling you it didn't hurt a bit. What else you got? You can't help but be worried."
He said regional-bank stocks and insurers are getting some relief from the rate cut. Those industries "benefit from lower funding costs for them and more favorable lending rates for consumers -- that is, if the consumer still has a job," added Giddis.
"We started the day hoping we'd get coordination from other central banks, but instead the ECB talked about ongoing fear of inflation. Plus, Apple's guidance was lackluster at best, dragging the rest of technology down with it," said Art Hogan, chief market strategist at Jefferies & Co.
Sterling lost ground even after minutes of the Bank of England's early January meeting showed its monetary-policy committee voted 8 to 1 to hold interest rates unchanged, indicating significant concerns over the outlook for inflation. .
Sour on Apple
On the earnings front, shares of Apple (AAPL) fell more than 12% after the consumer-electronics maker's outlook for the second quarter of fiscal 2008 came up short of analysts' expectations. .
Wireless bellwether Motorola Inc. (MOT) also weighed in with disappointing results, reporting an 84% fourth-quarter profit decline as well as warning that a turnaround in its handset division would take longer than expected. .
Shares of Motorola were down 18%.
Texas Instruments Inc. (TXN) bucked the negative trend, its stock edging higher after the world's largest maker of cell-phone chips reported better-than- expected fourth-quarter profits. .
Pfizer Inc. (PFE) gained 2.8% after lifting its 2008 outlook and topping fourth-quarter expectations.
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
01-23-081715ET
Copyright (c) 2008 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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