Mon, May 28, 2012, 6:46 PM EDT - U.S. Markets closed for Memorial Day

Stocks rise on manufacturing data

U.S. stocks had a big January, and they're starting February strong, too.

Stocks climbed Wednesday after strong manufacturing data and encouraging reports about the Greek debt crisis. The Dow Jones industrial average closed within 100 points of its post-2008 financial crisis peak.

Factories raised output in January by the most in seven months, according to the Institute for Supply Management's manufacturing index. And the Commerce Department said construction spending rose 1.5 percent in December, the fifth straight monthly gain.

"This is a market that is hungry for good news, and when it gets it, it responds very positively," said Alan Gayle, senior investment strategist for RidgeWorth Investments.

The Dow Jones industrial average rose 83.55 points, or 0.7 percent, to close at 12,716.46. Earlier in the day, the Dow was up 151 points. But it moved less than 100 points for the day for the 20th consecutive trading session.

The Dow's highest close since 2008 is 12,810, in April 2011.

The broader Standard & Poor's 500 index rose 11.68 points, or 0.9 percent, to close at 1,324.09. All 10 categories in the S&P 500 rose. The biggest gainer was financial stocks, up 1.6 percent.

The Nasdaq rose 34.43 points, or 1.2 percent, to 2,848.27.

On Tuesday, stocks wrapped up their best January in 15 years. The Dow gained 4.1 percent. Investors are less worried about the European debt crisis, and earnings at American companies are generally meeting expectations.

"It doesn't take good news" to make stock prices rise, said Randy Warren, chief investment officer for Warren Financial Service. "It just takes an absence of bad news."

For U.S. and European companies, the price-to-earnings ratio, one measure of how expensive stocks are compared with profits, had been at low levels that assumed the worst about Europe.

"These are Depression-era valuations, and something has to give," Warren said.

Plenty can still go wrong. Greece faces a €14.5 billion bond payment March 20 that it can't pay without additional help. Greece and the International Monetary Fund said Wednesday that negotiations to reduce Greece's debt should wrap up within days, raising hopes that it can avoid a default.

In the United States, monthly hiring figures from private payroll agency ADP were so-so. ADP said private-sector employment rose by 170,000 in January from the previous month. That was 10,000 fewer jobs than expected by analysts surveyed by FactSet.

ADP also said December job growth was smaller than it previously reported — 292,000 instead 325,000. The government releases its report on January job creation Friday.

Investors also looked past a cautious outlook from temporary employee provider ManpowerGroup. Its stock jumped 14 percent after fourth-quarter profits came in much higher than expected.

But the company said that while hiring may increase this spring, the European debt crisis could slow job creation. It predicted lower profits in the current quarter than Wall Street had expected.

In other corporate news:

— Amazon.com fell 7.7 percent after its quarterly net income fell and revenue growth was slower than Wall Street had expected.

— Whirlpool rose 13.5 percent after higher appliance prices raised its quarterly profit, and it said it expects shipments to increase as much as 3 percent in North America this year.

— Health insurer Aetna rose 3.1 percent after reporting a 73 percent jump in fourth-quarter profit on smaller expenses and lower usage of health care.

— Carmakers reported strong U.S. auto sales for January, with gains at all the big companies except General Motors. Privately held Chrysler's U.S. sales surged 44 percent, and it reported its first annual profit since 1997.

In Europe, British stocks rose 1.9 percent, German stocks 2.4 percent and French stocks 2.1 percent. Earlier in Asia, stocks didn't have the same momentum. Tokyo's Nikkei 225 edged up less than 0.1 percent, and Hong Kong's Hang Seng fell 0.3 percent.

The yield on 10-year U.S. Treasury notes rose 0.029 percentage points to 1.832. The euro rose slightly to almost 1.32 against the dollar.

Oil prices fell after reports that U.S. crude supplies rose last week and energy demand remains weak. West Texas Intermediate crude fell 87 cents to end at $97.61 a barrel in New York. Brent crude rose by 58 cents to finish at $111.56 a barrel in London.

 

61 comments

  • Joseph  •  New York, New York  •  3 months ago
    Do me a favor. Please, please stop attributing anything to positive signs about Greece. Check your articles for the past year and you'll find you've switched back and forth between positive and negative over 100 times and each time attributing the rise or fall of the market to same. A market fluctuation everyday based upon Greece seems like #$%$ to rationalize a result because sometimes you've no other explanation for the upward or downward movement of the market
  • John  •  New York, New York  •  3 months ago
    Market goes up on "hopes" for Greece, then next day it's down on concerns for Greece; this has been the charade for the past year ....
  • J EDGAR  •  Charlotte, North Carolina  •  3 months ago
    The first day of the month and fund managers are investing automatic contributions. My monthly contribution is going into a government bond fund and I don't mean the Greek government.
  • John  •  Denver, Colorado  •  3 months ago
    Irrational exuberance or dead cat bounce?
    • joe 3 months ago
      Correction: Irrational Gloom & Doom.
    • quickstudy 3 months ago
      Irrational indeed
    • Phyla nodiflora 3 months ago
      The less money and volume left in the market the less it takes to move it.
  • Scott  •  3 months ago
    Markets to rock on until the Super Bowl.
    • wjmdurham 3 months ago
      And well beyond.
    • Scott 3 months ago
      Perhaps beyond. But not well beyond. Get back on your etrade and get yourself some BAC dude. Putz.
  • Da Bears  •  3 months ago
    While I do agree that the market swinging violently upward will eventually balance out once more bad news surfaces. The people who are doing NOTHING with their money are going to be left behind in the long-run...

    Talk all the trash you want about the worlds economic status, there are plenty of people right now investing what they have and earning while you sit tight and earn 0% interest rates.
    • Scott 3 months ago
      Will truly be funny when you wake up one morning to realize you're about to lose 50% of your equity "investments"
    • wjmdurham 3 months ago
      Well Scott, Your pension is heavily invested in the market so YOU will lose BIG time too. Add that hundreds of thousands of people will be laid off if the conditions exist to drive the market doen that far. You really wish to see all those people living in the streets?
    • Da Bears 3 months ago
      Scott, If the market drops, I lose my investments, not my life savings... there's a difference. However, say another big dip comes along... I lose 50% and take a write-down of losses come tax time, but a large portion of Americans with 401k plans can now no longer retire, hiring would stop, companies would shrink, unemployment would sky rocket out of control, government spending would be at a catastrophic level (as if it already isn't) and we'd pretty much revert to the dark ages.

      The only thing that would be funny is your short sightedness getting you exactly what you wish for.
  • Cogito  •  Omaha, Nebraska  •  3 months ago
    Which data from the CBO report is driving up the markets?

    Congressional Budget Report
    January, 2012

    2012 Economic Growth 2%; 2013 at 1%

    2012 Unemployment above 8%; return to 5.25% by end of 2022

    2012 Taxes: Elimination of Bush tax cuts plus new taxes = tax increase of 30%

    2012 Spending: 23.2% of GDP (with the exception of WWII, the largest in American history)

    2012 Deficit: $1.079 Trillion (highest from 1947 through 2008)
    • AZRon 3 months ago
      Don't forget the National Debt is 100% of GDP and still rising.
  • Scott  •  3 months ago
    Raising that debt ceiling to keep the markets up. Great strategy.
    • Alfred E Neuman 3 months ago
      And Captain Obama keeps on deficit spending at the rate of $100,000,000,000 + per month! Bankruptcy ahoy!
    • Scott 3 months ago
      Zero interest and borrowing agianst the future productivity that will never pay! It's the new American Way!

      But don't forget to pick ya up some AMZN and NFLX 'cause they're cheap. 'cause Cramer told ya so." Babababa booooyaaa!
  • Cobey  •  3 months ago
    "DOW Reaches all time highs, who cares that Forclosures at an all time high, Poverty is at an all time high, the deficit is uncontrollable racking up $42k in debt per second and currently at $15.3 trillion, unemployment almost at an all time high, the difference between middle and upper class spread is out of whack, more people falling into poverty, but yet the stock market is almost at an all time high." MAKES COMPLETE SENSE TO ME!!! Goooooo Mr. Ponzi Scheme Gooooooooooooooooooooooo Yay!!!!!!!!!Go go go go go keep going up - this is the GREATEST Time to Invest!!! YAYYYYY
  • Johnny Randal  •  Manchester, United Kingdom  •  3 months ago
    Is there any Hope for Greece.....The good Hope is ....greece must pay debts and Bonds.....That is a good hope ....Beyond that hope is useless....I am not wasting my Saliva for hopeless case like Greece......
  • Thurston  •  Everett, Washington  •  3 months ago
    Some of the fundamentals are good and some not so good. Regardless, I'll take the gains. lol
  • Bill  •  Carmel, Indiana  •  3 months ago
    LOL! Greece hopes! Are you Fricking kidding me! They have been say "Hope" for Greece, Italy of the EU for months now! The only reason they use the word "HOPE" and other positive words in news headlines is to boost stocks! Greece is F'd, Italy is F'd, EU is F'd, and the US will follow! Keep dangling the carrot you banker pricks!
  • batman  •  New Orleans, Louisiana  •  3 months ago
    Yawn. Let me know when the Dow gets to 14,000. Then I'll be up to break even. I'll start getting excited at 15,000, probably 10 years from now.
  • WM.C  •  Philadelphia, Pennsylvania  •  3 months ago
    GREECE IN HEADLINE BUT NOT IN STORY:THAT's really hopeful you strap!
  • E=MC^2  •  Palm Bay, Florida  •  3 months ago
    I just need it to keep climbing 'til May when I can reset my IRA annuity and then won't care where it goes; I kown is too much to ask for.
  • Gary in Texas  •  Rocksprings, Texas  •  3 months ago
    Building you up , just to let you down. When are people going to learn ???
  • dailyobserver  •  Philadelphia, Pennsylvania  •  3 months ago
    Baffling that the stock market is doing so well and the American public is doing so badly. Has to be because the success of "US" corporations is mainly due to overseas profits, massive reserves of cash, tax evasion and the robustness of foreign economies at the expense of our own. Used to be that the stock market was the bellwether of the health of the economy and American prosperity. Today, in "post-depression" America, nothing is farther from the truth. The 1% are doing considerably better than the 99%. With higher prices, lower pay, and deathly slow growth and job creation, how am I expected to get all squishy over guys like Douche Romney and his family when they are gleefully stomping all over me and mine?
  • Mike  •  Katy, Texas  •  3 months ago
    Thanks Obama!
  • a moderate  •  3 months ago
    Wall Street, with lobbying and deregulation caused our economic failure. Republican Congress is trying to do more of the same, and make any barriers against Wall Street greed weaker. Obama plus a Democratic Congress put us in the best direction. We are in danger now because of the same greed, supported by Republicans in power in Congress. We need to get rid of lobbying, we need the Glass Steagle Act, and we need to get rid of all the power that has just been given to Corporations by the Republican Court Justices.
  • Barry bin born al Kenyan  •  Los Angeles, California  •  3 months ago
    If Republicans win as expected.....invest in earth moving equipment companies, railroads, copper, glass, steel, lumber, and concrete......sell your government printing press stocks.
 
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