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Dow Starts 2009 Up 258 Points

TIM PARADIS   01/ 2/09 05:57 PM ET   AP

Wall Street

NEW YORK — Wall Street started 2009 with a big rally Friday as investors, brushing aside a disappointing report on manufacturing, sent the Dow Jones industrials up more than 250 points and to their first close above 9,000 in two months. All the major indexes shot up more than six percent for the week.

The market lived up to the hopes of many analysts that it would have a fresh start in the new year after a horrific 2008. But many traders were also waiting to see how the market fares next week; they're cognizant of the fact that post-holiday volume was light and therefore Friday's trading might not be the best indicator of market sentiment.

Still, the market held to its recent pattern of taking bad economic news in stride, a pattern that began to emerge after it touched multiyear lows on Nov. 20.

"Over the last month you've started to see a change in sentiment and this certainly advances that," said Carl Beck, partner at Harris Financial Group in Richmond, Va.

The Institute for Supply Management said its manufacturing activity index fell to the lowest level in 28 years in December. The ISM, a trade group of purchasing executives, said its manufacturing index fell to 32.4 last month from 36.2 in November. Economists polled by Thomson Reuters had expected a reading of 35.5; a figure below 50 indicates contraction.

"We like to see the markets shrug off the bad news. That typically is a sign that we're forming a bottom," said Eric Thorne, an investment adviser at Bryn Mawr Trust.

Todd Leone, managing director at Cowen & Co., cautioned against reading too much into Friday's advance and said the first full week of the new year should provide insight into investor sentiment for 2009.

"The first five days are usually very telling," Leone said. "I'm not sure we'll be up or down." He said an advance in stocks Friday wasn't a surprise as some investors start the year by wading into the market. He said selling is more likely to occur next week.

The Dow rose 258.30, or 2.94 percent, to 9,034.69, finishing the week up 6.1 percent. The blue chips last closed above 9,000 on Nov. 5, when they stood at 9,139.27.

The Dow, the oldest of the big market indexes, fell 33.8 percent in 2008, its worst performance since 1931, during the Great Depression.

Like the Dow, broader stock indicators also advanced for the third straight session. The Standard & Poor's 500 index rose 28.55 percent, or 3.16 percent, to 931.80, its highest close since Nov. 5. The Nasdaq composite index rose 55.18, or 3.50 percent, to 1,632.21.

For the week, the S&P 500 finished up 6.8 percent, while the Nasdaq rose 6.7 percent.

The Russell 2000 index of smaller companies rose 6.39, or 1.28 percent, to 505.84.

Advancing issues outnumbered decliners by about 5 to 1 on the New York Stock Exchange. Consolidated volume came to 3.48 billion shares, compared with 3.75 billion on Wednesday.

Bond prices fell as investors took on riskier assets including stocks. The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note, which moves opposite its price, rose to 2.39 percent late Friday from 2.22 percent late Wednesday. The yield on the three-month T-bill, considered one of the safest investments and in great demand since the credit markets seized up in September, fell to 0.07 percent from 0.08 percent Wednesday.

The dollar was mixed against other major currencies, while gold prices fell.

Light, sweet crude rose $1.74 to settle at $46.34 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

Thorne contends 2009 could be a strong year for Wall Street because most investors are so shaken from the sell-off in 2008, which erased six years of gains in stocks. Market bottoms often emerge because investors are so pessimistic or because stocks seem incapable of making any sustained recovery.

"A bottom isn't formed in one day or even in one month but probably over several months," he said. "Expectations are extremely low for the economy, for corporate earnings and for the stock market itself."

Since hitting multiyear lows on Nov. 20, the Dow has advanced 19.6 percent, while the S&P 500 is up 23.8 percent.

"We're very confident that the $9 trillion that is in cash right now will look to find a home in better-performing assets," he said, referring to the amount of money invested in conservative but low-yielding areas like money market funds. Yields on safe investments like Treasurys have fallen to virtually nil as investors have clamored for safety and surrendered hopes of even earning a return on their money.

Next week brings a flurry of economic readings and potentially early comments from companies on their 2008 results and 2009 forecasts.

Traders will be anxiously awaiting a Labor Department report next Friday on December employment. A month ago, Wall Street showed newfound resiliency in the face of a bad reading on what is typically the most important economic report of the month. Stocks initially sagged but finished with big gains Dec. 5 after the government reported that employers slashed a larger-than-expected 533,000 jobs in November. Investors were hoping the report would prompt Washington to take broader steps to shore up the economy.

"The employment numbers will almost undoubtedly be very ugly. What will be interesting to see is what the market's reaction will be to those numbers," Thorne said. "We're also very interested to see what the corporate earnings reporting season will be like."

Harris Financial's Beck said the earnings reports could be a turning point for the market. "People expect earnings to be really bad. If they come out and they're not quite as bad, you could see this momentum in the market continue," he said. "If they come out even worse than expectations, that could be a major set back."

Stocks overseas also began the new year with a rally. Britain's FTSE 100 rose 2.88 percent, Germany's DAX index jumped 3.39 percent, and France's CAC-40 increased 4.09 percent. Markets in Japan were closed for a holiday.

___

The Dow Jones industrial average ended the week up 519.14, or 6.1 percent, at 9,034.69. The Standard & Poor's 500 index rose 59, or 6.8 percent, to 931.80. The Nasdaq composite index ended the week up 101.97, or 6.7 percent, at 1,632.21.

The Russell 2000 index finished the week up 29.07, or 6.1 percent, at 505.84.

The Dow Jones Wilshire 5000 Composite Index _ a free-float weighted index that measures 5,000 U.S. based companies _ ended at 9,364.54, up 595.19 points, or 6.79 percent, for the week. A year ago, the index was at 14,613.57.

___

On the Net:

New York Stock Exchange: http://www.nyse.com

Nasdaq Stock Market: http://www.nasdaq.com

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NEW YORK — Wall Street started 2009 with a big rally Friday as investors, brushing aside a disappointing report on manufacturing, sent the Dow Jones industrials up more than 250 points and to th...
NEW YORK — Wall Street started 2009 with a big rally Friday as investors, brushing aside a disappointing report on manufacturing, sent the Dow Jones industrials up more than 250 points and to th...
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07:12 AM on 01/05/2009
don't be fooled by a one day rally, on wall street, folks. unless they can figure out a way to get consumers to start spending again, it will be impossible to maintain a vibrant economy.
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08:42 AM on 01/05/2009
it was over-inflated, way beyond normal levels. We will go back to what reality looks like with more than 50% of the economy wiped out because of the steroid growth hormone that the fed was injecting it with over the years. The crash will hurt a lot more than people have a clue about.
12:04 PM on 01/04/2009
The stock market will always go up and down. If it doesn't, people can't make money.

It's basically a gaming industry for wealthy people.

The average investor should stay away. Those running the "game" need the average investor to get in so there is someone to lose money down the line.

Unfortunately, the average investor has lost far more often than they have won. The false lure won't work anymore. The average "use to be an investor" does not have the luxury of capital to invest.

Instead they inherit a poor economy, no job, no credit and no more hope for a quick fix.

I believe that people who can invest should do so in a Small American Private business offering some form of profit sharing with periodic ROI.

And, stay far away from the registered instruments traded in public markets that never offered any form of safe investment and instead only offer liquidity if the investor was quick enough to get out before losing everything.

Bill Myers
vdoaktv.net
07:07 AM on 01/05/2009
"Unfortunately, the average investor has lost far more often than they have won. "

Nothing new. This has been happening since day one. This didn't just happen this year. It's a fact that the masses will consistently get wiped out if they CHOOSE to play the market.

And some gratuitous advice. 'Average' investors, which make up 95% of the population would ALWAYS be better off staying in cash, cash equiv, gold/silver etc.....going back to day one.

Notice I said 95%, not 100%. There are some VERY bright flurks out there who clean up no matter what this twisted market does. But then again, their life IS the market. They've learned it and now live it. And, they had a very good teacher - common sense, being objective, independent thinking - tossing out all the B.S. that is thrown at the masses. Why on earth did their teacher retire. Poor b*stard must be worn out.
09:48 AM on 01/03/2009
Sitting back and watching this makes me truly paranoid - given all the comradery and deception that's been exposed on Wall Street, I am saddened by the fact that I suspect that the stock market is being manipulated by the same people who originally caused this debacle. I just have visions of the monied and powerful sitting around watching the markets and saying, "Okay, let's throw 'em a bone and have a gain today." "Nah, let's jerk 'em around a little more - let's drop it another 200 - we can jack it back up tomorrow."
I hope I'm delusional, but the market's fluctuations just don't seem to me to be tied to anything else going on in the economic sector. I think we are besieged by white collar criminals who have refined their trade into an art.
09:58 AM on 01/03/2009
I think we may be sharing the same delusion.
We are (and have been for a long time, I suspect) being jerked around.
I'm not usually the conspiracy theory type but when 1 + 1 begins to = more than two, then you know something ain't right.
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Samalabear
11:33 AM on 01/03/2009
Well, I'm delusional, too, so don't feel bad. But my delusion started about 30 years ago when I would watch the stock market go up every time job layoffs were announced or jobs would go overseas. The delusion has really gotten bad in the last eight years, though. As the middle class gets poorer the market goes higher -- yes, that puzzled me a lot. In the last month I have become super-delusional, because no matter how bad the news has been in the "real world" the market keeps going up -- not always a lot and sometimes it drops a little. There was no reason for the market to go up like it did yesterday. The bad news and the forecasts are really gloomy. Commercial real estate is the next to collapse, credit card defaults, more jobs lost, etc. So, tell me, why is the market going up and what keeps it going? We are being jerked around. If Obama was not about to be sworn in Bush and Paulson would be telling us the fundamentals of the economy are strong -- yup, yup.
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09:05 AM on 01/03/2009
The 1929 stock market crash did not create the full depression; The depression occured almost 6 months later when politicians enacted protectionist trade laws to protect American jobs. However, protectionism produced the opposite effect. If Obama goes in the direction of protectionism, which appears to be the case, we certainly are doomed.
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01:08 PM on 01/03/2009
This is 2009. And we are doomed because the Bush crime family along with Paulson just stole everything from the American treasury for the next two generations.
08:47 AM on 01/03/2009
Wall street is just a huge gambling casino. There is no reason for this bounce when unemployment is very high, housing market is down, no credit, bad business, companies closing down and others.
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marijam
Independent
09:11 AM on 01/03/2009
What goes down must come back up. Or so the thinking goes. Question is, will it go back up before or after you've lost the shirt off of your back?
09:19 AM on 01/03/2009
What goes down must come back up.

I really hate that particular statement. Depending on what you are invested in (Enron comes to mind) what goes down may very well disappear altogether.
08:04 AM on 01/03/2009
You see when you create 8.5 trillion in debt (inflation) the nominal price of stocks goes up in USD. In terms of Gold (Real money) the market is still going down. This is a early year bounce as to be expected from such a huge drop.
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VivaZapata
06:09 AM on 01/03/2009
The bait is in the water, little fishes
01:26 AM on 01/03/2009
Got any money ?
Buy empty land(not houses) in Residential Zones and hang on to it.
Viper
Former repub, still repenting
01:24 AM on 01/03/2009
Next week profits will be taken, back to 8300


Regards
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01:09 PM on 01/03/2009
Quite the optimist aren't you?
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Carolab
Walking an 87-year-old in the sand isn't easy
01:19 AM on 01/03/2009
http://www.economist.com/finance/displaystory.cfm?story_id=12852043

The Economist says we're in a Depression, not a Recession, right now.
07:10 AM on 01/05/2009
IF the Economist is saying this, I'd have 2nd thoughts (deep pessimism in their 'thoughts') we were really in a depression. Even IF they were right (doubtful) by them printing this means we are probably heading, very soon, out of 'depression'. Most MSM dupes believe the same............NOW .... after the fact. Der der der. Where were they a year or 10 ago? Nowhere to be found. They are always wrong.

And IF we are truly in a depression, what do you think will happen 1, 5, 8 years out now that your genius, Mr Bernanke, cut rates to 0% and is printing money like crazy?

Just the opposite of depression. Careful what you wish for - you just might get it? eecckkk.
12:18 AM on 01/03/2009
Another sucker rally to take more of our hard earned money. There is zero good news out there. Now I see oil prices are rising again - up 33% in one week!!
01:24 AM on 01/03/2009
Good, when it gets to 70 I'm out of the Energy Sector.
10:16 PM on 01/02/2009
Great way to start the year!
10:07 PM on 01/02/2009
Not to worry, by mid January we will be down 5% to about 8600. Again. It's a trader's market.
10:48 PM on 01/02/2009
Agreed. The sh_t is going to hit the fan after the 1st quarter.
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Artos
Down with Tyrants
10:06 PM on 01/02/2009
The DOW is nothing more than the Big Lie. It only goes up when others lot in life go down. People are losing their jobs right and left by the thousands, and industries are closing just as fast. So the question should be why in hell is the stock market going up. The answer is because the Wall Street Profiteers don't care where the money comes from as long as their is a payout to their investors. So if Thousands of people are let go from their jobs and those industries save some money in order to pass it around to the investors and get their own bonuses, why should Wall Street give a hang that others suffer.Screw other Americans as long as we get ours, is their motto. Wall Street should be ignored and not viewed as a measure of the health of our economy, because it's nothing more than a lie.
11:20 PM on 01/02/2009
Mmm hmm, yep. This is poetic justice for those Wall street people. The Dow is gonna keep going down until the worker in this country starts to do better. That's gonna take a few years at the earliest. If the masses in this country weren't a bunch of lazy people addicted to buying dumb stuff and celebrities there would have been a revolution a long time ago.

Until the worker in this country has some value restored in his physical labor we're not going anywhere. Becoming one of the 'investor' class should not be a requirement for success. If they keep insisting on that nothing's gonna happen
09:46 PM on 01/02/2009
Pep Boys - 33 stores of auto parts supplier closing
Sprint Nextel - 125 retail locations to close with 4,000 employees following 5,000 layoffs last year.
J. C. Penney, Lowe's and Office Depot are all scaling back
Ethan Allen Interiors: plans to close 12 of 300 stores
Wilsons the Leather Experts – closing 158 stores
Bombay Company: to close all 384 U.S.-based Bombay Company stores.
KB Toys closing 356 stores around the United States part of its bankruptcy reorganization.
Dillard's Inc. will close another six stores this year. ...Yeah, but the market is up! ashttp://prorev.com/2008/08/listrecent-store-closings.html