Mon, May 28, 2012, 8:44 PM EDT - U.S. Markets closed for Memorial Day

US market shakes off Greek worries and advances

Banks and industrials lead rally for stocks after Greek cost-cutting; Apple tops $500 a share

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Investors shook off their worries about Greece on Monday and got back to their routine of little-by-little gains.

The Dow Jones industrial average climbed 73 points — nothing flashy, but enough to regain most of what it lost with an 89-point drop on Friday. Before that, stocks enjoyed a slow, steady climb this year.

Financial stocks led the Dow higher. Its biggest gainers were Bank of America, up 2.2 percent, and JPMorgan Chase, up 1.8 percent. Financial stocks have been the best performers in the market this year.

Apple crossed $500 per share for the first time, with a 1.9 percent rise to close at $502.60. The company jockeyed with Exxon Mobil last year for the title of most valuable by market value but now enjoys a wide lead, $468 billion to $400 billion.

The market's gains were broad-based, with nine of 10 stock categories in the Standard & Poor's 500 rising, led by industrial stocks. Utilities declined by a whisker. European stocks rose.

For once, investors had the Greek parliament to thank. On Sunday, it approved sharp cuts in civil service jobs, welfare and the minimum wage, required by international leaders for a $170 billion bailout that Greece must have to avoid defaulting on its debt.

Other details of the bailout still need to be finalized, though. And rioting while Greece's parliament voted was a reminder that its financial problems are not solved. Germany also indicated it would take time before approving the bailout.

The Greek debt deal amounts to a default because creditors will get less than they are owed, said Peter Cardillo, chief market economist for Rockwell Global Capital.

Still, "orderly default is better than a chaotic default, which would lean on the whole eurozone and the global economy as well," he said, referring to the 17 countries that use the euro currency.

Cardillo said market gains may be muted for a while because of the social unrest in Greece and because stocks have already risen this year. The Dow is up 5.4 percent, the S&P 7.5 percent.

The Dow closed up 72.81 points, or 0.6 percent, at 12,874.04. It's 16 points shy of its highest close since the 2008 financial meltdown. The S&P rose 9.13 points, or 0.7 percent, to 1,351.77. The Nasdaq composite rose 27.51 points, or 1 percent, to 2,931.39.

Worries about the global economy and the state of the U.S. recovery pushed stocks around during the second half of 2011, said Ralph Fogel, a partner and investment strategist for wealth management and advisory firm Fogel Neale Partners in New York. .

"The end of the world was coming," or so traders thought, he said. "It wasn't the end of the world. ... Then the market stopped listening."

The Greek debt deal appeared to take some pressure off U.S. banks. Moody's Investors Services said the $25 billion settlement between mortgage lenders and states over foreclosure practices is a negative for all five major banks involved. Still, most major banks, which have varying levels of exposure in Europe, gained on Monday.

The euro fell a fraction of a penny against the dollar, to $1.32.

In Europe, the FTSE 100 in Britain rose 0.9 percent to 5,906. Germany's DAX rose 0.7 percent to 6,738. The CAC-40 in France rose slightly to 3,385. In Athens, stocks rose 4.6 percent.

In Asia, Japan's Nikkei 225 closed 0.6 percent higher at 8,999, and Hong Kong's Hang Seng gained 0.5 percent.

Investors were not ready to leave the haven of bonds in great numbers. Prices bounced between gains and losses as traders appeared skeptical that Greece was past its debt problem. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note was 1.98 percent, flat from Friday.

Oil rose to $100.49 per barrel in New York. Gold rose slightly to $1,726.60 per ounce.

Among other stocks in the news:

— ATM maker Diebold Inc. rose 9 percent after it reported strong sales to banks, a sign they may be willing to spend more to upgrade their technology.

— Chesapeake Energy Corp. rose 2.4 percent after saying it will try to raise as much as $12 billion by selling assets to pay down debt.

Regeneron Pharmaceuticals Inc. rose almost 12.3 percent after it said sales of its eye drug Eylea should reach $300 million, up from its previous forecast of $160 million.

— AmerisourceBergen Corp. fell 3.6 percent after the prescription drug distributor said its chief financial officer left to pursue other interests.

— The Madison Square Garden Co., following the winning streaks of the NHL's Rangers and the NBA's Knicks, rose 3.8 percent. "Linsanity," the fervor over the Knicks' surprise point guard, Jeremy Lin, should help revenue. Over five games, Lin is racking up an average of 27 points, or about four more than the Dow on a typical day this year.

 

25 comments

  • Me  •  Tampa, Florida  •  3 months ago
    All on insanely low volume hmmmmm....
    • Dave 3 months ago
      Oh, yeh, low volume makes the market EASY to MANIPULATE !!!
  • me  •  Richardson, Texas  •  3 months ago
    Great market went up 78 points price of gas another 3 cents, but the Fed is doing there jobs feeding the rich.
  • BEVERLY D  •  3 months ago
    This reminds me of the bankers coming down on Germany after world war 1, wanting reparation. I remember Mr. Hitler helping them to find their way out of that mess.
  • many owls  •  3 months ago
    shake it off like its not happening???? wth
  • God  •  3 months ago
    The Asian stock opened relatively low, it's slowly decending, same with the Dow Jones. So if you left your stock in there these few days you would have a slow loss, don't listen to this news garbage, they tried to hide this 89point loss with the tiny gain from DJI Futures yesterday.
  • Dave  •  3 months ago
    "US market shakes off Greek worries...", yeh, right. And PIGS can now FLY. Anyone with the brains of a DOOR KNOB knows that Greece is BANKRUPT !!!!! Today was just CRIMINAL manipulation Monday on FRAUD STREET.
  • Ron  •  3 months ago
    Why not? As long as the debt and bailout games continue, equity prices will continue to go up. The Fed and other central bankers are trying to prolong this game indefinitely. It will just make the catastrophe worse when all of this debt crumbles these houses of cards that are the US and European economies.
  • Jake  •  Canandaigua, New York  •  3 months ago
    under the rug we sweep again
  • Homer G  •  3 months ago
    OK read your history sheeple. In the roaring 20s they people was told "Buy Stocks, Buy Stocks Everything is fine." until the whole market crashed and burned.
  • Give me Liberty or Give m ...  •  Sacramento, California  •  3 months ago
    US Market blindly plunges forward despite reason, logic and all sense of reality.........
    • WalterW 3 months ago
      Yep, market once again turns a blind eye to anything even remotely resembling, as you stated, reality.
    • Dave 3 months ago
      Yeh, who needs a rational reason for market rally's when the PPT can just MANIPULATE it ?!?!?
  • chris  •  3 months ago
    Buy stocks! So I can get out at a higher price and leave you holding the bag.
  • Joseph  •  New York, New York  •  3 months ago
    Wonderful, so now "they shook it off," I guess that's like "shrugging it off." Nice to know the market is human. However, I'm sure you'll soon return to using the Greek crisis to explain the ups and downs of the market, much the same as you've been doing more than 100 times this past year. So, Yahoo will explain the market's rise one day due to a positive Greek situation although it is likely the situation will change the very next day as it has so many times this past year. As I've said over and over again, this appears to be nothing more than #$%$ from Yahoo to explain what the market does after the results are in- making the means comport with the ends. You appear to be devoid of any predictive capacity. Keep up the #$%$.
    • God 3 months ago
      Stocks are falling for the next few weeks, yahoo just writes a load of crap to make investors feel safe that they know the 'proffesionals' know what's going on so they are safe with your money. That's the ponzi right there. In fact they don't have a clue, one day they report that Greece had signed the bailout, the next few hours they haven't.
  • A Yahoo! User  •  3 months ago
    Fools and Pigs go to the slaughter house....
  • Walt  •  3 months ago
    Market never stays above SPX 1350...Get out now before the sell off.
    • Ron 3 months ago
      No more sell offs. The Market will keep going up no matter what happens until the top 1 percent have ALL THE MONEY!
  • Ron  •  Elmhurst, Illinois  •  3 months ago
    Obama and the Fed are just laughing in our face. WAKE UP SHEEPLE, it's reached the point where Corporate America will continue to make record profits even if ALL the consumers took their business elsewhere. Quantitative Easing is another phrase for BAILOUTS!
  • me  •  Richardson, Texas  •  3 months ago
    Wall St's continued greed and avarice has manipulated oil up to $100 a barrel. This is an enormous threat to the world’s economy! If you don't know it; listen up! Oil refineries all over the world are shutting down! Refineries in Hawaii, St Croix, Houston, Philly, Delaware, other places in the US, and Europe are shutting down! They’re shutting down for three reasons (1) The price of oil is too high. A refiner’s margins are so small at these high prices, not only can they not make money, most refineries have lost money. (Thanks speculators on Wall St!) (2) There is a glut of oil and distillates and no place left to store it. It’s been this way for a while (3 years). Some refineries are turning into oil storage facilities. They can make more money from renting tanks to banks and hedge funds than they can make by producing product. (3) Due to the European oil embargo on Iran, Iran is selling oil at a heavily discounted rate to Asian refineries who will sell refined products to us cheaper than American refineries. Bottom line; WE ARE SO SCREWED!!! If we aren’t drawn in to a war with Iran that affects the Strait of Hormuz , the bottleneck that much of the worlds oil has to pass through, then we’ll be affected by the refineries shutting down. Eventually, as our economies improve there will be terrible shortages of product. It takes time for refineries to come back on line. Expect shortages to skyrocket oil and distillates to the sky. Repeal the Commodities Modernization Act of 2000 and the Financial Modernization Act of 1999 and get speculators out of the Commodities markets!!!
    • Give me Liberty or Give m ... 3 months ago
      1999 and 200 special commodities act. That would be a great big thank you democrats and Bill " please #$%$ Clinton who brought us that one.
  • Resonance1  •  3 months ago
    When all is said and done, and the last petrol bomb has been thrown, Greece will become the privatized, amusement park of the international banking cartel! No other nation will dare to put themselves in the position that Greece is in, lest they reap the whirlwind of humility and loss of sovereignty!
  • yahooman  •  Louisville, Kentucky  •  3 months ago
    ITS ABOUT TIME!!!
  • oldtimer  •  La Crosse, Wisconsin  •  3 months ago
    Four more years of Obama will put us right where Greece is today.
  • Find out for yourself  •  3 months ago
    This is the message that pops up now when I post a comment!!! How kind of you Yahoo!!! go ahead and track my comments. I will send you a bill one day with interest!!!

    "Success! Your rating update has been posted to Yahoo! Finance."
 
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