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November 9, 2009 5:42 PM

Stocks Hit New High for 2009

By
CBSNews
(AP)  The Dow Jones industrial average stormed to its highest level in more than a year Monday as a falling dollar boosted prices for commodities including gold and oil. Stocks also jumped as investors grew more confident that governments around the world will keep interest rates low to help the global economy.

Energy and materials stocks led the market. The major indexes rose 2 percent and the Dow jumped 200 points for the second time in three days and reached its highest level in 13 months.

News that the Group of 20 countries will keep their economic stimulus measures in place signaled to investors that rates will remain low. With U.S. rates near zero, the G-20 news lessened demand for the dollar.

Even as investors are waiting for more signs that the economy is recovering, they've been focusing on the dollar's moves when they make their buy and sell decisions. Investors around the world see the dollar as weaker than other currencies, and so they're using it for what's known as "carry trade," to finance purchases of investments in other countries. That trend takes the dollar down further when those purchases are made.

But some analysts are questioning the stock market's moves given the still-weak economy, and warn that stocks and other investments could suffer big losses if the dollar were to turn higher.

"It feels like it's on fumes," said Sean Simko, head of fixed income management at SEI Investments in Oaks, Pa., referring to the market's advance. "Although fundamentals are catching up, they're not caught up."

He said the dollar's drop and the current surge in stocks and commodities are making it hard for investors to get a clear picture of how fast the economy is rebounding.

Still, many investors like a weaker dollar because it helps U.S. exporters by making their goods cheaper to overseas buyers and giving the companies a boost when they convert profits from abroad to dollars.

The ICE Futures U.S. dollar index, which measures the greenback against a basket of foreign currencies, fell to its lowest level in 15 months. The dollar rose last year and early this year but the index has been sliding for the past eight months since major stock indicators bounced off 12-year lows. Investors, although they've been basing most of their buy or sell decisions on the economy, have also been following a pattern of funneling money into stocks when the dollar weakens and pulling it out when the currency rises.

Commodities prices, meanwhile, tend to rise when the dollar is down, so gold topped $1,100 an ounce. Crude oil rose $2 to settle at $79.43 per barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, helped in part by Tropical Storm Ida, which threatened the Gulf of Mexico.

Energy and materials stocks rose along with commodities prices, and investors' enthusiasm for those stocks spilled over to other industries.

Brian Battle, vice president of trading at Performance Trust Capital Partners in Chicago, said the strength of the carry trade is giving an artificial lift to a range of assets, including stocks.

"There's cheap money that's going to be pumping its way into the system," he said. "That money is finding is home in the currency and commodity markets."

According to preliminary calculations, the Dow rose 203.52, or 2 percent, to 10,226.94, its highest finish since Oct. 3, 2008. The index rose as high as 10,228.23, topping its previous 12-month trading high of 10,119.46 set last month.

The broader Standard & Poor's 500 index rose 23.78, or 2.2 percent, to 1,093.08, its sixth straight advance. The Nasdaq composite index rose 41.62, or 2 percent, to 2,154.06.

Five stocks rose for every one that fell on the New York Stock Exchange, where volume came to 1.2 billion shares compared with 1.1 billion Friday.

Bond prices mostly rose, pushing yields lower. The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note slipped to 3.48 percent from 3.50 percent late Friday.

The dollar's slide also came as the International Monetary Fund said the dollar remained "on the strong side." That added to selling pressure.

Jason Pride, director of research at Haverford Investments outside Philadelphia, isn't troubled by the slide in the dollar because he sees it as another sign that fear in the market is easing after the slide of the past two years. Investors rushed into the dollar as they sought the safest assets.

"As the economy gets back to normal from what were very dire circumstances earlier this year the equity markets are going to be moving up and the dollar should be falling," he said.

"You're seeing a lot of pieces move off each other and the dollar is driving a lot of it," he said.

Retailers had some of the biggest gains in the market's broad advance. Abercrombie & Fitch Co. rose $2.58, or 7.4 percent, to $37.59 after several analysts said international growth would boost growth at the teen apparel retailer. The company is slated to post its fiscal third-quarter numbers Friday.

Investors are looking for any insight into how much consumers are spending as the holidays approach. J.C. Penney Co., Macy's Inc. and Wal-Mart Stores Inc. are among the stores expected to post quarterly results this week.

Among enegy stocks, Exxon Mobil Corp. rose 69 cents to $72.85. Gold producer Newmont Mining Corp. rose $1.52, or 3.1 percent, to $50.56 and hit a 12-month high.

The Russell 2000 index of smaller companies rose 11.96, or 2.1 percent, to 592.31.

Overseas, Britain's FTSE 100 rose 1.8 percent, Germany's DAX index jumped 2.4 percent, and France's CAC-40 rose 2.1 percent. Japan's Nikkei stock average rose 0.2 percent.

AP
Add a Comment See all 30 Comments
by Skirt-Lifter November 10, 2009 10:29 AM EST
by alphaa10000 November 10, 2009 3:58 AM EST
""Correctly put, the GOP delivered its cherished, but thoroughly bogus free market mythology on a stretcher, comatose by a toxic overdose of criminal fiduciary deceit.""
_____________________

You are a phenomenal writer. Exquisite prose. I agree with almost everything you said.

almost...

My concern is that you miss the one piece of the puzzle that allows for the oligarchy to continue it's mastery of our marionette strings.

This should not be news to you. The Dems are in collusion with the repubs. Both parties are equally culpable in the pillaging of the American taxpayer's coffers.

I could write long posts of examples of a complicit Dem party, and have, but I'm getting tired of screaming at the deaf... pisssing in the wind.

____________


I could've made a quip in response to your elegant post like:

Oh yea...and the Dems had nothing to do with it, they all have halo's.

But that would not be helpful.
Reply to this comment
by patronejohn November 10, 2009 3:29 AM EST
Can't wait for this bubble to burst too.
Reply to this comment
by tafhdyd November 9, 2009 11:01 PM EST
Lets give credit where credit is due. This is a Bush/Republican agenda recovery.

Translation: When you have screwed up the world economy the way the Bush/Republicans have there is no place to go but up.
Reply to this comment
by alphaa10000 November 10, 2009 3:58 AM EST
ANOTHER TRANSLATION OF THE DOW

A high DOW average is music to the ears of many Americans, because they believe it means prosperity. However, the high DOW really means only the Usual Suspects are still alive-- and even thriving, thank you.

As America's favorite social deviants, the Wall Street Elite pulled off unthinkable market pranks at our expense, and lived to tell about it. They defied even the reigning market ideology-- The Market Regulates Itself.

Yes, over the past eight years, when the GOP put its mythical "free market" to the test, it failed miserably on its own demerits. Since this simply could not happen, the spectacle of massive failure drove the GOP and various Faux News talking heads into a frenzy of full denial.

In fact, a major industry for Chicago School economists (CATO Institute, Stanford, American Enterprise Institute-- all wholly-owned subsidiaries of Disney, Inc.) was to explain the recession without faulting a GOP core ideology-- (cue clarion trumpets) "The market is a rational intelligent entity, infallibly programmed to bring prosperity."


OUT OF RABBITS

Yet even Adam Smith did not mean the "invisible hand" was attached to a magician. And when no rabbits came out of the Bush/Paulson hat, they passed that hat along to taxpayers. QED.

Even Greenspan, lower lip trembling with astonishment, now confessed publicly the market is not a self-regulating, rational entity. Instead, the market is a fallible human institution, and bears watching-- lots of it.


SOMEONE WILL PAY FOR THIS

Correctly put, the GOP delivered its cherished, but thoroughly bogus free market mythology on a stretcher, comatose by a toxic overdose of criminal fiduciary deceit. That myth, still on ventilation and heart machine, was delivered on life support to the taxpayer. Unfortunately enough, life support has been very expensive, and someone must pay.

That is to say, the same guy who lost his job, but paid his taxes, had the priceless moment of discovering (1) the bank which (after a fashion) held his mortgage, not only (2) got a bailout from his tax dollars, but (3) sent a deputy to his doorstep to deliver the bank's foreclosure notice.

And while the same bank explained somberly to news media that "our expenses (bonuses) must be paid, somehow", CATO rushed to assure onlookers this is only a market correction, and for our own good. Someday, we will thank them, too.

(Anaheim shot of homeowner and family sitting on a curb, in front of their now padlocked home. Reporters trail after departing bank officials, pleading, "Please, sir, could you explain about the expenses, again...?)


PARTY WINDS DOWN

And so, another wildly destructive party of American self-delusion winds down. Yet, there will be another, because this party thrives wherever delusion is found. It has become as institutionalized as any fungal parasite.

Sometimes called the Greedy Old Prevaricators, this party still tugs at our heartstrings with comforting myths about the True Path to Prosperity (starring Horatio Alger), America as the Best and Brightest (starring Ronald Reagan), and (except for the AIPAC official protest) as "God's Chosen People".

Bereft of ideas, bankrupt (literally) of credibility, counseling fiscal austerity in the face of the very recession it nurtured, the GOP wants everybody simply to tune daily to Faux News, and obediently swallow a daily dose of That Old Time Delusion.

Because the GOP is now busy "rebranding" itself-- with the same old patronage script but a "New, Improved" title. (With new faces to cover old lies.)

More than anything else, the GOP proves P.T. Barnum was right-- "There's a sucker born every minute."
by spaceatoms November 9, 2009 10:47 PM EST
I love the comments and I don't know why we have to hear about the Theft Street Casino all the time. Hey, they should have reports about the Mirage and all the other casinos in Vegas and talk it up also. Its pretty obvious now what is going on, more inflation in the market to drive up stock prices and outrageous compensation packages to only the players in big companies as winter quickly approaches and more estrogen is pumping around the world. The worst thing was the DOW going back up and all the games starting again, it shows that the current administration is totally lost with the war, the economy, health plans, immigration, jobs, abortion and any other topic and Theft Street is just a blanket.
Reply to this comment
by Skirt-Lifter November 10, 2009 10:38 AM EST
wow...you hit the nail on the head with one subtle point that if expanded on could get me banned again. Let's just suffice it to say...Since "Mad Men" have dominated the business landscape and ravaged the economy, let's give a maternal approach a chance. lol
by timdgrim November 9, 2009 9:53 PM EST
In other words........'The Wall Street Casino was Paying Off today!
Can't wait for Xmas, that's when the Goldman Sachs bonuses come out!!
Maybe they'll send taxpayers a 'Thank You (Suckers)' card.
Reply to this comment
by Skirt-Lifter November 9, 2009 9:31 PM EST
Here lies the proof that healthy competition in world markets is gone:

It used to be that when the price of commodities went up, stocks went down. The increase in the cost of raw materials (commodities) was reflected in lower profits for manufacturers and retailers.

This paradigm is gone. Now, when the price of oil (a commodity) goes up, the profits for Chevron go up. This is counterintuitive, and a clear sign that the old laws of supply and demand no longer function the way they used to.

It's because of 'collusion in epic proportions' and corruption within antitrust gov't watchdogs, lobbyists, legislatures, and mega-global corporations .

The global economic machine is complicated. But when the price of raw materials increases, and the manufacturers who use these materials make bigger profits than when the costs of goods was low, something is terribly wrong.
Reply to this comment
by alphaa10000 November 10, 2009 4:23 AM EST
Skirt-Lifter said, "The global economic machine is complicated..."
---

The DOW is not an explanation of the economy or an index of prosperity. (Can you spell, "bubble"?)

Just as a pulse does not give a full picture of cardiac function (or health).

But you are absolutely correct about "'collusion in epic proportions' and corruption within... lobbyists, legislatures, and mega-global corporations."

Tellingly enough, you are not correct about "antitrust gov't watchdogs", because there were no watchdogs when, and where it counted. Regulators were explicitly excluded by GOP-sponsored measures in 1998 and 1999.

This recession was engineered by the GOP, Sen. Phil Gramm, Robert Rubin, and camp followers in the name of the unregulated, "free" market.

This is not the failure of an economic "paradigm", as you put it, but is called "gaming the system". Gaming is sometimes also termed rank exploitation of 95 percent of America by a global economic elite which knows no country or loyalty.

The concentration of wealth through history parallels the failure of economic mobility, and failure of the freedoms the market is believed to manifest.

That process of wealth concentration has been underway since the return of the GOP to power.
by Skirt-Lifter November 10, 2009 9:01 AM EST
We actually agree alpha, the DOW being a mere 30 companies is simply a "pulse".

I am correct about the watchdogs... Aware that the Glass-Steagll act should NOT have been repealed. I am also aware that the watch dogs were castrated by the last congressional act in 2000...were Wall St. was give an exception and allowed to gamble.

It's not accurate to shovel all blame on the GOP (whom I hate) when a complicit dem party was right behind the conspiracy to remove the obstacles that kept corrupt gamblers from raiding the American economy.
by jeannettelj November 9, 2009 9:17 PM EST
SO THE STOCK MARKET SET A NEW RECORD FOR THIS YEAR. TOMORROW IT MIGHT BE DOWN AGAIN. I DON'T THINK THAT THE STOCK MARKET REFLECTS THE REAL FEEL OF THE COUNTRY. JUST ASK THE FOLKS WHO HAVE LOST THEIR JOBS AND CAN'T FIND ANOTHER ONE. JUST ASK THE FOLKS WHO HAVE HAD THEIR WORK HOURS REDUCED AND ARE STRUGGLING TO PAY THEIR BILLS. JUST ASK THE FOLKS WHO HAVE FORECLOSURE AND/OR BANKRUPTCY LOOMING IN FRONT OF THEM. I DON'T THINK WHAT THE STOCK MARKET DOES MATTERS A HILL OF BEANS TO THEM. IT ALL SOUNDS GOOD TO THE ECONOMISTS BUT ASK THE AVERAGE AMERICAN WHAT THEY THINK AND I DON'T THINK YOU WILL GET MANY POSITIVE RESPONSES.
Reply to this comment
by stn_sage November 9, 2009 9:35 PM EST
I think you're probably correct...but in our current society...it isn't about reality...it's about getting the public to believe a reality that doesn't exist!

I know...things are bad...but try not to let it worry you too much.
Enjoy the good things in your life...and try not to let the news get you down. Wrap yourself up in the love of your family and/or friends and don't worry about all the creeps in society...they'll get theirs'...in the end!
by rightbehind November 9, 2009 7:32 PM EST
They found more jibs to export to third world countries. They also found out that stockholders will more than likely be able to continue to loot the medical system. What's good for wallstreet is bad for mainstreet.
Reply to this comment
by Skirt-Lifter November 9, 2009 8:50 PM EST
With Brazil, Indonesia, Australia, India etc doing so well, when Main st USA fails completely, there will be more frontiers to raid economically.
by ll2owt November 9, 2009 7:30 PM EST
anyone understand??
Reply to this comment
by Skirt-Lifter November 9, 2009 8:51 PM EST
My guess. Bubble. That's the way our dysfunctional economy operates. Bubbles.
by ll2owt November 9, 2009 7:30 PM EST
anyone understand??
Reply to this comment
by jgg000015 November 9, 2009 10:09 PM EST
wall street responds to growth. the dollar is down which makes US products cheaper for the world. Caterpillar tractors cost 20% less, Coach handbags, Tiffany jewelry, Corning, which makes flat screens, etc.
Also, interest rates globally continue to be low which allows these companies to borrow and grow.
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