Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Weak dollar, home sales data carry stocks higher

Nov 24, 2009
INVESTORS halted a three-day losing streak on the stock market yesterday, sending prices broadly higher on a weaker dollar and better-than-expected home sales numbers.

Major stock indexes soared more than 1 percent, including the Dow Jones industrials, which rose 133 points to a 13-month high. Volume was thin ahead of the Thanksgiving holiday, which can exaggerate the size of swings in the market.

Investors found plenty reasons to buy as the day's developments pointed to two trends: an improving economy and interest rates that are expected to stay low.

- The National Association of Realtors reported that October home sales rose more than 10 percent revived investors' optimism after disappointing data on the housing industry last week raised concerns about the strength of the economic recovery.

- Charles Evans, head of the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, was quoted as saying he saw little risk that the economy would slide back into recession, although unemployment is unlikely to fall until next summer. And James Bullard, president of the Federal Reserve Bank in St. Louis, said the U.S. Fed should continue to buy mortgage-backed securities after the program is supposed to expire in March. That would continue to keep interest rates low.

- The dollar, a key factor in stock trading in recent months, extended its pullback, sending prices for commodities including gold and oil higher and in turn, the stocks of companies that produce them.

Meanwhile, bond prices retreated as investors regained their appetite for risk.

Low interest rates and a resulting slide in the dollar have been big drivers behind the stock market's eight-month rally. Low interest rates enable investors to borrow cheaply and buy assets like stocks and commodities that have the potential to earn higher yields than cash.

Investors were buying yesterday on somewhat contradictory forces in the market. The strength in housing is a sign of an improving economy, which could argue in favor of raising rates, while the dollar's weakness points to rates remaining low. Analysts say investors who still have plenty of available cash are primed to buy, and so the market may also be rising on its own momentum.

"There's still US$2 trillion of cash that needs to find its way into the stock market," said Phil Orlando, chief equity market strategist at Federated Investors.

Orlando said investors will continue to look for dips in the rally as a way to get into the market, not wanting to end the year without participating in some of the big gains stocks have made.

"Bearish managers are sweating bullets that they're not going to be able to get that cash in the market and they need to do that," he said. "That is why any pullback we've seen this year has been met with a wave of cash that has pushed stocks up higher."

At the same time, many portfolio managers have cooled their buying, not wanting to risk losing the big returns they've made since stocks began rallying in March. Those opposing forces are likely to result in choppy trading over the next few weeks, analysts said, which will be exacerbated by light volume as the holidays approach.

The Dow rose 132.79, or 1.3 percent, to 10,450.95, after losing 120 points over the previous three days. The Dow rose as much as 177 points to a 13-month trading high of 10,495.61.

The Standard & Poor's 500 index rose 14.86, or 1.4 percent, to 1,106.24, while the Nasdaq composite index rose 29.97, or 1.4 percent, to 2,176.01.

Four stocks rose for every one that fell on the New York Stock Exchange, where volume came to a low 979.9 million shares, compared with 1.1 billion Friday. Many traders were already on vacation for Thanksgiving, and the decreased volume can contribute to price swings.