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

Stocks stage late rally and finish flat

NEW YORK (AP) — The stock market rallied in the last half-hour Tuesday, seizing on reports that suggested the unraveling Greek debt talks might be saved after all. Stocks finished flat after languishing in the red for most of the day.

The Dow Jones industrial average gained 4.24 points to close at 12,878.28, about 12 points shy of its best finish this year. The Standard & Poor's 500 lost 1.27 points to close at 1,350.50. The Nasdaq composite index gained 0.44 point to 2,931.83.

As usual, it was about Greece. U.S. stocks were weighed down as European finance chiefs canceled a meeting planned for Wednesday to discuss a second international bailout for the country.

The meeting was called off after Athens failed to deliver on several demands made by its partners in the euro currency union. Greece needs a €130 billion bailout by March 20 to avoid a default that could rattle the world financial system.

Stocks in the U.S. were also hurt by a discouraging report on retail sales. Bank of America led the Dow lower, dropping 3.3 percent.

The Dow was down as much as 87 points at its low for the day. But the market found hope in reports quoting Greek government officials as saying party leaders would promise by Wednesday to implement deep spending cuts and other reforms.

Declining stocks still outnumbered advancing stocks by about 2-to-1. Volume was light at about 3.8 billion shares on the New York Stock Exchange.

The stock market has been rising slowly but steadily most of this year, despite the unresolved debt crisis in Europe and a stalemate over U.S. tax policy and benefits for the long-term unemployed.

For most of Tuesday, investors appeared to be waiting for more clarity on all those issues before sinking more money into stocks, said Colleen Supran, a principal at the investment adviser Bingham, Osborn & Scarborough.

"Everyone wants to know the rules of the game before making these decisions," Supran said.

The late-day rally was a sign that investors expect the coming round of Greek debt talks to resolve some of those outstanding questions. The talks have brought incremental and sometimes contradictory developments that have confused some investors.

The country has already passed some of the deep spending cuts its lenders were demanding but hasn't really satisfied anyone. Greeks have rioted, saying the cuts are too harsh, and Greece's neighbors have expressed concern that the cuts are not enough.

"Every week it's, 'The sky is falling,' then, 'No, it's not.' 'There's rioting in the street,' then it's over. 'There's going to be a deal Friday,' then, 'No, it's not Friday, it's Wednesday,'" said Ben Schwartz, chief market strategist at Lightspeed Financial in Chicago. "We really don't know what's underneath the covers over there."

He thinks U.S. stocks will continue to inch forward — not because investors are particularly optimistic about U.S. companies but because they have even less faith in European governments.

"We're the best house in a bad neighborhood," he said.

Downbeat economic news from Europe reinforced the danger. Greece said its economy shrank drastically at the end of last year, and Europe is expected to report Wednesday that the economies of the 17 countries that use the euro shrank 0.4 percent after growing 0.1 percent the quarter before.

Late Monday, Moody's also downgraded its debt ratings on six European countries, including Italy, Portugal and Spain. Moody's also said it might cut France, Austria and the U.K. as well.

News out of the U.S. was also disappointing. The Commerce Department said U.S. retail sales rose 0.4 percent last month, but analysts were expecting 0.7 percent, and spending on auto sales was down. Automakers had reported higher sales, so Tuesday's numbers could mean they have had to offer more discounts to persuade customers to spend.

Yahoo fell 5 percent after reports that its plans to sell its Asian assets, a key strategy for turning around the troubled company, fell apart.

— Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co. fell 5 percent after its fourth-quarter profits missed analysts' expectations.

— Bank of America fell 3.3 percent after Citi analyst Keith Horowitz downgraded his rating to neutral, saying the bank's "legacy issues," notably its 2008 purchase of mortgage lender Countrywide, "will take a while to play out."

— Luxury retailer Michael Kors Holdings Limited was a bright spot, shooting up 28 percent after revenue skyrocketed 68 percent in the latest quarter. The company, which peddles $300 sequined jumpsuits and wristwatches at stores in cities like Milan and Paris, was helped by strong holiday sales as well as new stores. Its results are also a sign that wealthy customers are continuing to shop even as the rest of the economy struggles.

 

51 comments

  • CB  •  San Rafael, California  •  3 months ago
    20% of the todays Dow volume in the last thirty seconds!

    No market manipulation here! Move along!
    • PENY STOK 3 months ago
      I know what your saying lol...The news is all bad out there, it should have dropped another 80 points,
    • A Yahoo! User 3 months ago
      I notice that even when the market does fall at least 1/3 of the losses are shaved off in the last hour. THEY never allow the market to end the day on its lows.
    • Paul 3 months ago
      QE3 is going on. secretly
  • Anonymous  •  3 months ago
    The title should read "Stocks stage late rally bolstered by Operation Twist and with artificial propping up by the Plunge Protection Team." Let's face it folks, there was nothing fundamentally different in late trading vs. early trading, with the exception of manipulation.
  • J  •  3 months ago
    The Associated Press is junk. No one in their right mind believes Greece has any relevance on the Dow at this point. The Dow closed well off its lows for the day so the AP needed some horseshlt reason to write about it. Pathetic.
  • RayRay  •  Tampa, Florida  •  3 months ago
    what progress, they had to cancel Wednesday's meeting!
  • A Yahoo! User  •  Mt Prospect, Illinois  •  3 months ago
    Japan just reported a negative 2.3% GDP. Europe will enter a depression. China is slowing down and the only thing keeping the U.S. going is money printing and fake accounting. Yet the market goes up almost every day.
    • William H. 3 months ago
      Like the song from Robin and the Seven Hoods, "WE GOT HIGH HOPES". Here is hoping our hopes become reality. USA clearly in decline but others declining more. Our fake accounting is nothing compared to Chinese manipulation of currency and trading markets. A dishonest WORLD. No safe havens.
  • T-Rock  •  3 months ago
    Once again the "Miracle" news from Europe just 1/2 hr before closing led to the market closing up instead of 90 pts in the toilet.
  • John Galt  •  3 months ago
    Chart painters pushing the S&P up to over 1350 that's all it was - total #$%$ rally as usual.
  • Ivan  •  Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania  •  3 months ago
    the Whole of EU downgraded and this POS rallies???? THE END IS NEAR!
  • 5th Horseman  •  Phoenix, Arizona  •  3 months ago
    the half hour miracle is back. what a load...
  • donald  •  Memphis, Tennessee  •  3 months ago
    The FED controls and runs the market. Been doing it for 4 years. Realty is irrevelant. They are proping the market up because nobody is in it and Greece is about to default. The reason Europe doesnt matter any more is the FED cant fix it so they have declared it a non factor to the market. Only idiots would park their money at Wall Street. Outside of worrying whether a fund goes up or down is whether wall street is taking your money out and living off of it!
  • Kael  •  Eastland, Texas  •  3 months ago
    The Fed sure spends our tax dollars pumping the market. Last 15 min was pure manipulations. What a #$%$ market.
  • bobb  •  Santa Clara, California  •  3 months ago
    Fake reports on Greece. They have had years to get things going, and people believe they are gonna make headway at 11pm at night?
  • A Yahoo! User  •  Mt Prospect, Illinois  •  3 months ago
    If we unplugged the High Frequency Trading computers the Dow would fall 3,000 points in a day. This market is the product of pure manipulation by computer algos.. This is the opposite of "Free Market" capitalism and authentic price discovery.
  • Dummicrats.and.Retardican ...  •  3 months ago
    Why anyone would buy into market that is 2 times to high amazes me. It's like a repeat of the past 2 stock market bubbles and recent housing bubble. Too many dumb people make being dumb right and being right dumb. Irrationality loses in the end. Truth must eventually win over lies.
    • Rich s 3 months ago
      Oh, oh, sounds like somebody didn't buy in last december--boo, hoo.
    • Dummicrats.and.Retardican ... 3 months ago
      Huh? You want to buy a $100K house off me for $225K? It's the same thing going on with the stock market.

      I began shorting again as I am on the correct side of valuation. Dumb people buy at any price and they are a big part of the bubbles made in this country with the present stock market bubble, the prior two and the housing bubble. When you get millions of dumb people together doing dumb things, the responsible people get killed.
    • Rich s 3 months ago
      And how are those shorts working out for ya?
  • TodG  •  Newark, New Jersey  •  3 months ago
    And by Greece I mean HFT! :)
  • Scorpio  •  3 months ago
    I'm totally confused.
  • NoWayGray  •  Tulsa, Oklahoma  •  3 months ago
    We need a real journalist, we need real reporting. Someone tell me it wasn't market manipulation that brought today's number back into a positive by less than 5 points.
  • Phuk-u-bernanke  •  3 months ago
    Our debt problem is 100 times worse in magnitude than Greece and 2X worse on a relative per person basis. So, Greece should be bailing out the United States!

    That's how this insane world is functioning now.
    • michaelc 3 months ago
      Functioning? Yeah, but for how much longer? All good things must come to an end. And all this midnight monetary madness is NO EXCEPTION !
  • julia  •  3 months ago
    Must have been congress trying to get their insider trades in.
  • wakeup  •  3 months ago
    Come on Greece, bail out the United States! We are in worse financial shape than you!
 
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