Stocks surge; S&P 500 turns positive for 2009

digg Share this on Facebook Huffpost - Stocks surge; S&P 500 turns positive for 2009 stumble reddit del.ico.us RSS

TIM PARADIS and SARA LEPRO | 05/ 4/09 07:26 PM | AP

What's Your Reaction?
Read More: S, Business News
Sp Break Even

NEW YORK — The Standard & Poor's 500 index is up for the year. And for once, it was the housing market that sent stocks soaring.

The S&P 500, considered Wall Street's most important indicator, bounded up 3.4 percent Monday and erased the last of its losses for 2009. And the Dow Jones industrials shot up more than 200 points and had their first finish above 8,400 since Jan. 13.

Two months ago, an S&P 500 in positive ground would have seemed impossible, with the stock market having fallen to 12-year lows on fears of a worsening recession. Monday's rally was led by the same financial and housing stocks that were decimated by the credit crisis and the sinking economy, and it added more momentum to a stunning rally that began March 10.

A double dose of good housing news ignited the advance: Pending U.S. home sales rose more than forecast and had their second straight monthly gain, while construction spending rose unexpectedly in March after five straight declines.

With Monday's gain, the S&P has soared 34.1 percent in the 39 trading days since the rally began, its steepest gain over that many days since 1933. The Dow, meanwhile, is up 28.7 percent.

Investors are betting that a stream of slowly improving data since early March mean that the economy, and Wall Street itself, have found a bottom. As they've kept buying, they've also overlooked reports, including millions of lost jobs, that point to continuing economic weakness.

Still, as dramatic as the rally has been, no one is describing the market as euphoric, and analysts are warning that Wall Street might not be able to sustain its advance. Monday's gain came on moderate trading volume, a sign that some investors are still cautious.

"The bear market may not be over," said David Kotok, chairman and chief investment officer of Cumberland Advisors. He pointed out that the real estate market is still weakening and banks are still taking losses on loans.

Story continues below
advertisement

"We have the makings of a 'V' or the first half of a 'W,' " Kotok said, referring to the shape of the stock market's path. "The upward leg looks the same ... Only time will tell."

The S&P 500, the market barometer preferred by professional investors, is now up 0.4 percent for 2009. That matters not only for market watchers _ many investments including mutual funds either mirror or are measured against the index. The Dow is still down 4 percent for the year.

The S&P 500 index rose 29.72 Monday to 907.24, its first close above 900 since Jan. 8. It had shown a gain for the year only during the first five trading days of January, before the market began a huge drop that carried the S&P 500 and the Dow to their lowest levels since 1997.

The Dow rose 214.33, or 2.6 percent, to 8,426.74.

The Nasdaq composite index rose 44.36, or 2.6 percent, to 1,763.56. The Nasdaq, with a big representation of high-tech and smaller company stocks, has run ahead of the other indexes, and is up 11.8 percent in 2009.

The rally came after the National Association of Realtors said its index of pending sales for previously occupied homes rose 3.2 percent to 84.6. That was well ahead of the 82.1 economists had been expecting and the second month of gains after the index hit a record low in January.

Separately, the Commerce Department said construction spending rose 0.3 percent, the best showing since a similar increase last September. Economists surveyed by Thomson Reuters had expected spending to drop 1.5 percent.

Jerry Webman, chief economist at Oppenheimer Funds Inc., said stocks are rallying because investors aren't fearful as they were months ago that the economy is headed for the abyss.

"There's been this fear that every six months another shoe drops and maybe there isn't a shoe in mid-air right now," he said.

The pending home sales data touched off a rally in home builder stocks. KBR Inc. rose $1.25, or 7.9 percent, to $17.15, while Lennar Corp. rose 88 cents, or 9.3 percent, to $10.34.

The market's enthusiasm will be put to several tests this week including the April employment report, one of the most closely watched economic indicators, which comes out on Friday.

Another concern for the market is the release Thursday of the results of the government's "stress tests" on the 19 largest U.S. financial companies. Some analysts have worried in recent weeks that renewed anxiety about the state of the financial system could upend the market's powerful two-month advance.

But investors set aside some worries about financial companies even as analysts predict that the tests _ designed to determine which banks would need more cash if the recession worsens _ will show that several banks need more capital.

The Financial Times reported Sunday that Citigroup Inc. and Bank of America Corp. are working on plans to raise more than $10 billion each as they negotiate with regulators over the findings of the stress tests.

Citigroup declined to comment, and a Bank of America spokesman called the report "completely inaccurate." Citi rose 23 cents, or 7.7 percent, to $3.20, while Bank of America jumped $1.68, or 19.3 percent, to $10.38.

Investors shrugged off word that regulators told Wells Fargo & Co. to shore up its finances after the "stress tests" showed the bank would have trouble surviving a deeper recession.

Wells Fargo is one of several banks regulators will force to have larger capital buffers to protect them against possible future losses, according to two people familiar with the matter who spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the process. The company declined to comment.

Wells Fargo rose $4.64, or 23.7 percent, to $24.25.

In other trading, the Russell 2000 index of smaller companies rose 19.84, or 4.1 percent, to 506.82.

About five stocks rose for every one that fell on the New York Stock Exchange, where consolidated volume came to 6.9 billion shares compared with 5.2 billion shares traded Friday.

The economic reports and a big purchase of government debt by the Federal Reserve left bonds little changed. The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note slipped to 3.16 percent from 3.17 percent late Friday.

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

Light, sweet crude rose $1.27 to settle at $54.47 on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

Overseas, Germany's DAX rose 2.8 percent and France's CAC-40 gained 2.5 percent. Markets in Japan and London were closed for holidays.

NEW YORK — The Standard & Poor's 500 index is up for the year. And for once, it was the housing market that sent stocks soaring. The S&P 500, considered Wall Street's most important indicator, ...
NEW YORK — The Standard & Poor's 500 index is up for the year. And for once, it was the housing market that sent stocks soaring. The S&P 500, considered Wall Street's most important indicator, ...
Report Corrections
 
Comments
116
Pending Comments
0
iPhone App Promo

Want to reply to a comment? Hint: Click "Reply" at the bottom of the comment; after being approved your comment will appear directly underneath the comment you replied to

View Comments:
Page: 1 2 Next › Last » (2 pages total)
- loki I'm a Fan of loki 134 fans permalink
photo

Its time to start getting really scared now. From CNBC to wall street they are now hinting around at the next new liquid gold. As the way it was said the other day, " everyone needs water, and in this environment when there is no sure thing in the market, water is the new gold for finding quick large profits"
The real fecal matter is about to hit the fan as when ivy greed is moving into making profits off of water. And Im not talking bottled water, Im talking all water. One company has already signed some deals that gives them the rights to charge for all water in some south American countries. This includes water puddles and even when it rains. Oh, they said they wont charge for it, but we have heard those stories before. And dont forget, Mr Windbag Moneybags TBoone Pickens has been purchasing up underground aquifers around the US for years. Even well water on private land could soon be charged if it can be said to possibly come from a privately owned aquifer. Just wait , with Ivy Greed involved, soon you will be charged if you sweat.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:54 AM on 05/05/2009
- billw8017 I'm a Fan of billw8017 37 fans permalink

The companies exploited their monopoly by doubling prices. The result was a popular uprising, governments fell, and the contracts were abandoned. Similarly, in Argentina when the government supermarkets were privatized by being sold to Cargill, prices were doubled, rioters looted the stores, governments fell and the contracts were abandoned. People react strongly when investor greed threatens their very lives.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:20 AM on 05/05/2009
- billw8017 I'm a Fan of billw8017 37 fans permalink

And, when the Mexicans privatized the telephone service, the new owners immediately raised prices to 170%. Perhaps the phones are less important than food and water, but the people paid and the owner became the richest man in Mexico.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:38 AM on 05/05/2009
- VictoriaP I'm a Fan of VictoriaP 35 fans permalink
photo

As much as I want Obama to succeed, I simply don't see that anything has been done to fix the underlying weak fundamentals in the market. The EXACT same problems are there that were there before Obama took office. Unfortunately, the bailout/TARP has been the final looting of the treasury.

The many hundreds of trillions of real dollars that has been sucked out of the global economy by the banksters creating phantom wealth is gone forever. The only solution was to let the market work and the banksters die a capitalistic death. The rescue was never designed to work, only to loot the treasury.

At the end of the day, these institutions will fail anyway, AIG included AND the American people will have an enormous bill that we can't pay in the next several generations. In addition, we will have now homes and own nothing. Sad but true.

This is not Obama's fault, as this economic *uck fest has been in the making for decades. The best that O can do is try to soften the blow. Clearly, the president has little real power that supercedes the banking elite.

Obama is, at best, trying to reveal everything that he can to the American people, so that we the people can determine the next course of action, whether it be complacency or an uprising.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:03 AM on 05/05/2009
- tel8034 I'm a Fan of tel8034 92 fans permalink

After January 20th the rethugs blamed every stock market index drop (domestic and international) on Obama .................. But now that the stock market is rebounding what do we hear from the SAME rethugs? ...............CRICKETS.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:23 PM on 05/04/2009
- billw8017 I'm a Fan of billw8017 37 fans permalink

The administration has a broader program of health care, education, and sustainable energy. These may work best for the country's prospects. We can suffer a new recession if these serious matters are addressed. I don't think the administration's economic policies are sound but that they restore the unsustainable conditions that led to the crash.

The crash IS a serious matter. It shortens lives, spreads misery, and hurts the children. It is very hard to do something effective about it because powerful political interests feel it serves them. Let the resentment fester to maturity. I don't expect some Marxist revolution of the proletariat, but informed democracy would be nice.

Will money survive? What does a barter economy look like in a modern nation? Will necessities depend on a command system?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:34 AM on 05/05/2009
- DFL I'm a Fan of DFL 39 fans permalink
photo

Wall St. had another Obama bounce today!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:51 PM on 05/04/2009
- Dayahka I'm a Fan of Dayahka 33 fans permalink

Either it's professional investors drawing the money in from ordinary investors so they can then sell and make a killing, or it's the Fed manipulating the market by under-the-table buying. In the first case, a lot of investors are going to be a lot poorer pretty soon, or the American people (via the Fed) will have lost another bundle.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:39 PM on 05/04/2009
- Viper I'm a Fan of Viper 305 fans permalink

The FED does not particpate in the market.

Investors had a choice of making 2% in safe investmnets or 20% returns on Wallstreet. Money sitting on the side lines had to be put back into the market by fund mangers who would lose their investors if the Dow goes up 30% and thier fund goes up just 2 percent... you would pull your money out of that fund and into another making a better return...

We cant get much poorer than we were when the DOW went to 6500. I have now made up much of what I had lost.

When the market drops thats wealth taken out of the system and its further asset devaluation which increases the cost of the bailout... hope for the DOW to keep going up... if you care about your neighbors job.

Regards

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:43 PM on 05/04/2009

FebM. Is this well stated comment coming from inspired knowledge and faith? It sure ain't connected to the nature of events in the past 100+ days.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:34 PM on 05/04/2009
- theone718 I'm a Fan of theone718 23 fans permalink
photo

Keep in mind Jobs lag by 6 months. No matter how you spin it it's not bad news.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:19 PM on 05/04/2009
- DumbDad I'm a Fan of DumbDad 32 fans permalink
photo

Helpful!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:26 PM on 05/04/2009
photo

That's like having your bullpen strike out the side when you're down six runs in the 8th.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:15 PM on 05/04/2009
- BryantG I'm a Fan of BryantG 44 fans permalink
photo

LOL!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:08 PM on 05/04/2009
photo

This is laughable, and deeply disgusting. This fake market and these hollow trades and bets are the reason we are where we are. LESSON NOT LEARNED! The rest of the $$$ of the middle class is about to be sucked from the market with another predictable crash of a market that sells nothing to those who can not afford it. This system is the most obviously corrupt it has ever been, and yet the sheep return to graze. Shame on us...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:50 PM on 05/04/2009
photo

Agreed. This country has less than 10 years left before it is a third world nation. Time to fight for what our founders believed our country should have been, instead of what our leaders have turned it into the last 90 years.

-3pp

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:33 PM on 05/04/2009
- FebM I'm a Fan of FebM 45 fans permalink

A comment......
What many do not understand is that the government is playing for time, not some brilliant economic miracle. We do not have the money or political leverage to solve this problem from the top down by divine fiat. We have to buy time -- literally -- for the ten-thousand smaller acts of restoration and renewal to take place. All this flow of money, this vast seemingly indiscriminate transfusion of economic blood, has one purpose: to keep the patient's heart pumping until the systemic crisis is past -- another 6-12-18 months. It is Obamatimsloanafpgetty messy, sloppy, gross heroic medicine. Sure there's tremendous waste. Get used to it. And get these people out of the operating room!

"It is very interesting to watch how this crisis reveals and highlights character: the sniveling privileged Wall Street upper-crust, the semi-hysterical, uninformed punditocracy, the puerile Republican opposition -- and Obama, cool as a cucumber, playing his game, five steps ahead, setting up moves that won't come to fruition for months or years, while his opposition flails at the thin air where he used to be. I love it.
It's the future that is calling Obama, not the present.... read on......

http://andrewsullivan.theatlantic.com/the_daily_dish/2009/02/through-the-dus.html

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:40 PM on 05/04/2009
- hark I'm a Fan of hark 122 fans permalink

You're completely wrong. He's not repairing the economy, he's repairing the Wall Street bubble, putting patches over the weak spots that tore open and let all the air out of the economy.

Soon it will be full of hot air again, enabling the rich to continue looting us for everything we have before going overseas, leaving the wreckage of America behind.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:19 PM on 05/04/2009
- DumbDad I'm a Fan of DumbDad 32 fans permalink
photo

No, NO~! I'm completely wrong. It's my role, I earned it, and you are not taking it away from me. I"M wrong, not him.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:48 PM on 05/04/2009
- cdrach I'm a Fan of cdrach 4 fans permalink

call me when this country ADDS even 1 net job instead of losing 700,000 a month-we are headed to Japan in the 90s/ lost decade time

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:03 PM on 05/04/2009

guess we were better off under Bush - banks were solid, market was up, people were working, economy was strong, national debt was being paid down, respected foreign policy, humanitarian leadership . . . . according to the REVISIONIST Republicans . . . .

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:30 PM on 05/04/2009

Except that most of us notice that our pay is actually much less than it was 8 years ago!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:01 PM on 05/04/2009
- nk007 I'm a Fan of nk007 29 fans permalink

Be sure to let me know how to reach you so that I can see you eat your words. But guess what, I know that, in keeping with the tradition of right wingers, you will probably change your tune and give all the credit for economic recovery to Ronald Reagan as you did when Clinton was president and presided over an economic expansion.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:08 PM on 05/04/2009
- Viper I'm a Fan of Viper 305 fans permalink

WE have had decades of little economic activity/growth just like Japan without a banking crisis... the 70s to be exact and early 80s..

Japan had a ten fold increase in real estate and stock in a short period of time.. we doubled in a longer period of time. Japan has a declining population. We have a growing population.

Japans population saved way too much..we saved way too little... They were an exporting super power. We are super importer. Thye did not have a small business growth enhine... infact their reaction was to save more forcing the government to spend more....

At least for all their spending they have a new infrastructure and we have Iraq.

There is no evidence that if Japan had nationalized the banks or not spent their wayout, that things would have been better. They had no tent cities or soup lines.

Nopw lets toalk about Sewden as if their 8 bilion dollar banking crisis in a country of just 8 million relates to us.

Regards....


Anyone who

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:40 PM on 05/04/2009
- cdrach I'm a Fan of cdrach 4 fans permalink

The National Association orf Realtors!- I believe everything they say! why would they find a need to doctor numbers(even though the banks are witholding huge #s of foreclosed homes in order not to completely flood the market)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:00 PM on 05/04/2009
- samilli3 I'm a Fan of samilli3 67 fans permalink
photo

I blame President Obama

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:47 PM on 05/04/2009

Clinton did it . . .

Show us his birth certificate . . .

Those TV thingies are government brainwashing units . . .

Burn books, they teach our kids evolution . . . .

. . . . guess the Teabag Brigade will be out in force now that the market is UP . . . .

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:33 PM on 05/04/2009
- nk007 I'm a Fan of nk007 29 fans permalink

Hey, why not? When the stock market declines it is Obama's fault. When the stock market goes up it has nothing to do with Obama. Even better when stocks rise, like they did to day, it really means nothing because Obama has already destroyed the economy and bankrupted citizens by taking all their money in taxes that amount to 90% of their income. Besides, Obama is cooking the numbers to make the economy look good. I tell you, right wingers are models of integrity and consistency.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:15 PM on 05/04/2009
photo

On Jan 20th the DOW closed at 7949.09 and on May 4th it closed at 8426.74. The last time the DOW closed in the 84XX range was on Jan 12th and 13th.

Since inauguration day (Jan 20), the previous highest close was on Jan 28th at 8376.00. The DOW has recovered 1879.59 points since its lowest close on Mar 9th.

During March the TeeVee pundits, particularly those on the three cable news stations, were blaming Obama for the bear market, saying the market didn't like his policies. My question is, will the Obama Admin get any positive acknowledgment for the turn-around seen thus far?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:46 PM on 05/04/2009
- judyc I'm a Fan of judyc 123 fans permalink
photo

The answer is no.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:01 PM on 05/04/2009
photo

Exactly. It was all his fault when it was going down--and when it ticks up, it's got nothing in the least to do with his policies and skillful embrace of behavioral as well as Keynesian macroeconomics. It just happened. No wonder only 20% of the country is Republican.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:10 PM on 05/04/2009

I hear it's a bump from the successful Bush economic changes made on January 19th . . . .

Obama will NEVER get credit as long as he is a Democrat . . . and black.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:35 PM on 05/04/2009
- nk007 I'm a Fan of nk007 29 fans permalink

I've heard people who say that the credit belongs to Ronald Reagan because the bump is proof that this free market policies are still working well.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:20 PM on 05/04/2009
- Opygollopy I'm a Fan of Opygollopy 87 fans permalink

Yes he will, by the people who know how to use their brains. I guess that leaves out most Republicans. But, that of course will never change.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:40 PM on 05/04/2009
- ntmessage I'm a Fan of ntmessage 38 fans permalink

The market is a predictor of the economy but not a guarantee. We need to stay vigilant with the Obama plans, which are working but can be derailed or politicized at any time. It is likely predicting renewed economic growth, essential for all Americans and forecast that one of the longest recession in history (likely eight quarters long) and stock assets owned by more than 70% of all Americans may stop their loses at around 50% of what they were worth before the crash of 2008. A nightmare for all of us, simply one aspect of the Bush legacy.
On the other hand, ample misguided activity abounds driven to crush our economy for ideological reasons alone and we must not let up.
The crash may have been another Pearl Harbor, but we are still at war against unregulated hedge funds, sovereign funds and private equity money all over the world that exacerbated the crash and still want America to fail. We cannot let this happen on Obama’s watch. The 10% far right (they suddenly feel they want to be conservatives) and 10% of the far left (they falsely claim to be progressives) both maintain now hardened agendas against America successfully navigating the worst economy since the great depression.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:36 PM on 05/04/2009
- masanf I'm a Fan of masanf 22 fans permalink

Obama plans are working? Give me a break.

Pending home sales were up last month as well, then ACTUAL home sales took a nose dive. The economy shrank at a 6.1% rate the first quarter. It shrank at 6.3% the fourth quarter of last year. Wow, what an improvement. Obama should get a medal or something. Unemployment will likely hit 9.0% this Friday. I guess you don't remember the bull we were fed about the unemployment rate not going over 8.0% if the stimulus passed, do you?

One of the only bright spots of the last GDP report was consumer spending. Well guess what, after that report was released, we found out consumer spending was actually on the decline. Initial unemployment claims continue to hit record highs.
So, please, spare us the bull about Obama turning around the economy. The economy is still in decline.

And it would be nice if the "dissent is the highest form of patriotism" crowd would quit peddling the canard that opposing this president means we want the United States to fail.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:50 PM on 05/04/2009

OK, then. But if you're right, is it Obama's FAULT?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:57 PM on 05/04/2009
- Samalabear I'm a Fan of Samalabear 71 fans permalink
photo

Frankly, I don't believe the numbers during this Administration anymore than I did during Bush.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:12 PM on 05/04/2009
- nk007 I'm a Fan of nk007 29 fans permalink

Your man Rush said that he wanted President Obama to fail and you all cheered. I am on to your games though: any thing good that happens in the economy you will shout that Obama has nothing to do with it; anything bad that happens in the economy, it is all Obama's fault. When the stocks were down, Republicans all shouted in unison that it was an indication of Obama's failed economic policies that were destroying wealth. If consumers are more optimistic now they were four months ago, good Lord, don't dare give Obama credit because it is all an illusion. Some of us remember this broken record from the days of Bill Clinton. Honest dissent is indeed "the highest form of patriotism." However dishonest dissent is all aimed at advancing a political and ideological agenda and has absolutely nothing to do with patriotism.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:31 PM on 05/04/2009
- ntmessage I'm a Fan of ntmessage 38 fans permalink

The market is a leading indicator as stated and unemployment is a lagging one unfortunately and may rise higher until the recovery is solid and employers start hiring again.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:47 PM on 05/04/2009
- patwal I'm a Fan of patwal 6 fans permalink

I can't imagine for the life of me why you're complaining. Seems you have a very busy job writing all these responses -- and surely nobody would spend this much time if they weren't being paid extraordinarily well

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:51 PM on 05/04/2009
Page: 1 2 Next › Last » (2 pages total)
Comments are closed for this entry

 You must be logged in to comment. Log in  or connect with 

Connect