Mon, May 28, 2012, 3:42 PM EDT - U.S. Markets closed for Memorial Day

Markets Rally on Jobs Report, But Is Worst Really Over?

RELATED QUOTES

SymbolPriceChange
^GSPC1,317.81995-2.86

Friday's market rally featured the latest round in the battle of whether a gradually improving US economy can outweigh Europe fears, with the home team winning-at least for the moment.

With the real Super Bowl set in Indianapolis for Sunday, Wall Street's own big game centers on whether increases in employment, auto sales and other areas outweigh the pressures that European debt defaults could have on the global economy.

For the moment, even market bears are willing to cede at least a little ground, if only for now.

"It's a bit of an improvement," says Walter Zimmerman, senior technical analyst at United-ICAP in Jersey City, N.J. "It's better than it was, but we're skeptical that it's sustainable given the continuing unraveling."

Last week, Zimmerman had set 1325 as a resistance level for the Standard & Poor's 500 (INDEX: ^GSPC - News). The index since has eclipsed that mark, and its more narrowly based peer, the Dow industrials, also is threatening to break a three-and-a-half year post-financial crisis high.

The market's primary struggle over the past nine months or so has been to shake off the troubles in Europe, where Greece is nearing a likely debt default next month and its neighbors face similar travails ahead.

Zimmerman thinks investor sentiment has become overdone and will be shown imprudent once the sovereign debt crisis begins to recapture the daily headlines.

"We think the next big bomb to drop will be coming from Europe anyway," Zimmerman said in response to the jobs report that showed the unemployment rate falling to 8.3 percent and payrolls expanding by 243,000. "The (Organization for Economic Development) leading economic indicator is well on its way to slipping back into recession, so we think that's going to be a big drag on the U.S. economy."

Economists also remained skeptical that the job-growth trend would stay intact.

"We've been here before with 200,000 plus monthly gains in payrolls in spring 2010 and spring 2011 that ultimately came to nothing," Toronto-based Capital Economics said in a note to clients. "With housing still in the dumps, fiscal policy being tightened and the euro-zone crisis likely to flare up again at any moment, we still think the US will endure another year of weak growth in output and employment."

Investors, though, are behaving as if they haven't got a care, pushing the S&P 500 up year-to-date 5.4 percent as of Thursday's close, and another 1.3 percent by around mid-day Friday.

"The big question is, will this translate to higher equity prices? We think it will, as with more jobs should come an improvement in confidence," says Ryan Detrick, senior analyst at Schaeffer's Investment Research in Cincinnati. "We all know how dour things looked just a few months ago, and now with some good news maybe the massive amounts of inflows to bonds and money markets we've seen the past few years will finally work its way into stocks."

That's despite some fairly stern warnings from policy makers - the Federal Reserve , in particular - that the outlook for employment specifically and the economy in general remains shaky.

"The Fed needs to get away from this crisis mindset," says James Paulsen, chief market strategist at Wells Capital Management in Minneapolis. "You don't have to approach this like we are still in an emergency. Zero-interest rates is not normal accommodative policy. In some ways this Fed is suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder. They can't seem to get away from this mindset."

The jobs growth at least should take a third round of asset purchases - known as quantitative easing - off the table, says Paulsen, who believes investors soon will begin worrying more about inflation than the deflation the central bank has been fighting.

Given a market without Fed influence, he think investors more comfortable in their own jobs will put money to work on their own.

"The real thing in this is what it does for confidence for those that are already employed," Paulsen says. "Confidence-building gives us a chance to get to new high territory. We're planting the seeds already."

Jobs Friday, though, has typically been a bad day for the market, despite the streak of positive job gains. The S&P 500 has finished negative the past eight first-Fridays when the government reports the numbers, a streak that could be broken today.

That would be in line with strongly bullish sentiment that has dominated trading since the calendar turned the page to 2012. Fund flows have shown improvements for the past few weeks, and investor sentiment surveys remain strongly bullish.

With Europe continuing to lurk in the background, the market could be setting up for a retreat, a sentiment echoed even by those who think Wall Street is on its way to a positive year.

"We're starting to see some investors buy into the economic expansion," says Brad Sorenson, director of market and sector analysis at Charles Schwab in San Francisco. "Investor sentiment for the short term has gotten a little bit extended. February has not traditionally been a great month for the stock market. We wouldn't be surprised to see a little bit of a pullback."



More From CNBC
 

71 comments

  • Bob F  •  3 months ago
    The Fed and State-run media have made a big miscalculation. They should have let the market correct but kept pumping it up. It might have come back before the election, but Now- It will Crash before November.
    • HeyMister 3 months ago
      Sooner or later folks will start to read the fine print. They will Not be able to cook the books forever.
    • Joe 3 months ago
      that's because the street prefers Romney to Obama. he's one of theirs after all. a crash just before Nov guarantees Obama is voted out...
  • Tim  •  Tampa, Florida  •  3 months ago
    I don’t want to be naive but where are all these jobs being created?

    Where I live in Florida I am seeing more “For Lease” signs in the bigger malls they just built 2-3 years ago.

    They don’t name names with specificity like Target, Manufacturing Companies, US Steel or the states that employment is picking up in?
    • Andy 3 months ago
      Florida is a retirement state.. more or less
  • Mark  •  3 months ago
    So, any unemployed people on these message boards feel better about their future after hearing this news?
    • Danh Amduat 3 months ago
      nope
    • Average Joe 3 months ago
      I am just all atwitter! Can't wait for the phone to start ringin' off the hook with job offers!
    • billy 3 months ago
      I am unemployed. And yes I feel much better,,,because my stocks are making me rich today like Mitt.
  • Charles  •  Orlando, Florida  •  3 months ago
    Bogus employment numbers, bogus rally!!!
    • David 3 months ago
      The numbers are bogus, because every month the U.S. government is issuing one hundred and twenty five thousand work VISAs to those living in foreign countries!
  • J  •  3 months ago
    Wall street is on Viagra and once the prescription wears off, watch out...
  • riggedleague  •  3 months ago
    "Zero-interest rates is not normal accommodative policy." - No SH**
  • dfiz  •  3 months ago
    Noooo, the market never sucks people in and SCREWS them.. NEVER
  • beacon  •  3 months ago
    This new way of count unemployment is silly. They only count those collecting unemployment check but not those who can't collect anymore. Eventually, after a few years this method will bring the number down to 3-4 %
    • Phyla nodiflora 3 months ago
      This way is not new, in fact we count the unemployed much longer in the past few years than we have historically. Unemployment may last up to 99 weeks in some states while historically it was never counted past 26 weeks. Unemployment has always only counted those recently layed off and still actively looking for work. Has been that way for at least 50 years.
    • time to sign up 3 months ago
      Totally true Beacon. Most people know the true unemployment numbers are way higher.
  • DavidDaveDavid  •  3 months ago
    Does anyone actually believe that any headline government #'s coming out in an election year would be bad?.....trust me the headline #'s will always be great this year, the revisions may come later but nobody cares about the revisions.....
  • CrnaLegia  •  Boston, Massachusetts  •  3 months ago
    All is good now, the Donald infused substance and integrity into the Empty Suit. Nothing can go wrong anymore!
  • MICHAEL  •  Augusta, Georgia  •  3 months ago
    Glad to see more americans are working. But these #'s are suspect at best. Rememer the oracle of omaha "buy when there is fear and sell when there is high expectations"
  • yahoo user  •  Baltimore, Maryland  •  3 months ago
    WEEEE up we go... more would be news, soon to be revised...Plus we can bring out the , always move the market news the "Greece is almost fixed" Episode Nine (stay tuned for more exiciting episodes)...let the big boys just pump the news (revisions being written as we read) and move the market up and down like a yo yo...good thing todays press reporters are just totally worthless , silly little nothings/schills or Wall Street might not get away with this
  • Jason  •  Houston, Texas  •  3 months ago
    This rally is feeling a bit forced....
  • Christopher  •  3 months ago
    "Confidence-building gives us a chance to get to new high territory." Confidence-building: "overexuberence" in Greenspan-speak.

    "We all know how dour things looked just a few months ago, and now with some good news maybe the massive amounts of inflows to bonds and money markets we've seen the past few years will finally work its way into stocks." This would be the "dumb money" that Wall Streeters prize.
  • HeyMister  •  3 months ago
    Berry must keep the Real-Unemployment number up around 20% to be elected in November.
  • gollywogazoo  •  3 months ago
    CNBC wants Americans glued to their TVs - fear boosts ratings. Elementary, dear Watson.
  • 5th Horseman  •  Phoenix, Arizona  •  3 months ago
    To show you how they cook the numbers: did you know that they "adjusted" for 1.2 million that 'Left' the workforce? That's how the rate fell. The play all sorts of tricks to hide the real numbers.
  • FrankO  •  3 months ago
    Anyone actually do any research or are you just here to toe whatever party line you're part of?

    http://data.bls.gov/timeseries/LNS11300000
  • Robbery  •  Singapore, Singapore  •  3 months ago
    Playing the stock market is like gambling in the casinos. The small investors who bought later is likely to get burnt. We don't know when is 'late'. The big 'boys' buy shares among themselves to boost the shares' prices. The small investors who had lost lots of money in the past jumped in because they felt too painful to miss the boat. It is likely they will lose again.
  • Joe  •  3 months ago
    fake jobs number. its cooked using some idiotic formula that backs out reality, just like the CPI calc.
Loading...
 
Recent Quotes
Symbol Price Change % Chg 
Your most recently viewed tickers will automatically show up here if you type a ticker in the "Enter symbol/company" at the bottom of this module.
You need to enable your browser cookies to view your most recent quotes.
 
Sign-in to view quotes in your portfolios.

Yahoo! Finance on Facebook

  YAHOO! FINANCE ON TWITTER