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Apple’s Blowout Earnings Lift US Stocks

Published 05/09/2012, 06:59 AM
Updated 05/14/2017, 06:45 AM
Equities

Apple’s sterling earnings reports pushed up Asian markets at the open, but the indexes closed mixed. The Nikkei climbed 1% to 9561, and the Shanghai Composite gained .8% to 2507. On the losing side, the Hang Seng slipped .2% and the Kospi eased .1%.

Mainland European markets rallied on Wednesday, with the CAC40 up 2%, and the DAX up 1.8%, while the UK’s FTSE closed flat. Automakers rallied after Peugeot Citroen and Valeo reported solid profits, climbing 4.6%, and 8.7% respectively.

US stocks advanced, particularly tech shares, following Apple’s earnings report. The Nasdaq surged 2.3% to 3030, the S&PP 500 jumped 1.4%, and the Dow added 89 points to 13091.

Apple shares popped 8.9% to 610 after blowing past analyst estimates. 14 brokerages upgraded the stock.

Currencies

The Dollar slipped on Wednesday as Fed chairman, Bernanke, reiterated his commitment to additional easing, if needed. The Pound, Swiss Franc, and Euro each rose .2%. The Australian Dollar gained .3% to 1.0353, and the Canadian Dollar rallied .4% to .9836, while the Yen closed little changed at 81.34.

Economic Outlook

Durable goods orders fell 4.2% , far more than forecast, while the less volatile core durable goods orders unexpectedly dropped 1.1%. The Fed raised its projection for economic growth to 2.4%-2.9% from January’s 2.2%-2.7% forecast.

Stocks Gain On Strong Housing Data

Equities

Asian markets traded mostly higher on Thursday. The Kospi inched up .1% to 1964, despite a 6.2% drop in LG Electronics, and the ASX 200 gained .3% to 4375. The Hang Seng rallied .8% to 20810, while the Shanghai Composite eased .1%, and the Nikkei closed flat.

European markets closed mixed, as banks fell 2.3% following lackluster earnings from Deutsche Bank. The FTSE and DA advanced .5%, while the CAC40 declined .1%. Automakers extended their gains from the previous session, rising 2.7%, after Volkswagen reported strong earnings, pushing the stock up 7.8%.

US stocks rallied, as the Dow jumped 114 points to 13205, ad the Nasdaq and S&P 500 both climbed .7%.
DJI
Dow Tacks On 114 Points

H&R Block tumbled 10.7% to 14.95 after announcing it would close stores and layoff employees to cut costs.

Currencies

The Dollar declined against global currencies on Thursday. The Pound edged up .2% to 1.6195, while the Euro and Swiss Franc inched up .1%. The Yen spiked .5% to 80.95, and the Australian Dollar climbed .3% to 1.0396.

Economic Outlook

Weekly unemployment claims dropped by 1K to 388K, significantly worse than expectations for a drop to 374K. However, pending home sales surged by 4.1%, blowing past analyst forecasts for a 1.2% gain.

Stocks Rise Despite GDP Disappointment And Ratings Cuts

Equities

The Bank of Japan announced it would expand its current asset purchase program by another $124 billion, but the news had little lasting impact on the region’s markets. The Nikkei closed down .4% to 9521, surrendering a brief gain following the announcement. The Kospi rose .6%, boosted by Samsung Electronics 2.5% gain, after announcing a record $5.2 billion profit for the first quarter. The Shanghai Composite slipped .4% to 2396, and both the Hang Seng and ASX 200 declined .3%.

S&P cut its debt ratings on peripheral European countries by 2 notches, although the equity markets failed to notice. Spain’s IBEX jumped 1.7%, the CAC40 gained 1.1%, and the DAX rose .9%. Trailing behind, the FTSE posted a respectable .5% gain. Superb earnings by Swedish engineering firm, Sandvik, helped push stocks higher, as the stock rose 12.5%.

US stocks closed higher, despite disappointing GDP data. The Dow added 24 points to 13228, the Nasdaq climbed .6% to 3069, and the S&P 500 gained .2% to 1403. The Nasdaq rallied 2.3% this week, its biggest gain in 3 months.

Procter & Gamble lowered its guidance for the year, citing high commodity costs. The stock fell 3.6% to 64.44.

Currencies

The Dollar fell against all major currencies on Friday. The Yen and Australian Dollar both jumped an impressive .9%, to 80.29 and 1.0467, respectively. Meanwhile, the Swiss Franc, Euro, Canadian Dollar, and Pound moved up .5% in an unusually synchronized effort.

Economic Outlook

US GDP grew at an annualized 2.2% rate in the first quarter, slower than the 2.6% expected. On a brighter note, consumer sentiment climbed to 76.4, exceeding forecasts.

European Shares Sink As Spain Slips Into A Recession

Equities

Asian markets opened the week solidly, led by Hong Kong’s Hang Seng, which rallied 1.7% to 21094, a 6-week high. The ASX 200 climbed .8% to 4397, and the Kospi gained .3% to 1982. Markets in Japan and mainland China were closed for holidays.

GDP data from Spain showed the economy shrunk by .3% in the first quarter, indicating it had slipped into a recession. The news sent the IBEX down 1.9%, and pressured European stocks across the region. The CAC40 fell 1.6%, the FTSE dropped .7%, and the DAX slid .6%.
CAC 40 INDEX
France's CAC40 Drops 1.6%

US stocks snapped a 4-day winning streak, closing moderately lower. The Dow erased 15 points to 13214, the S&P 500 shed .4% to 1398, while the Nasdaq skipped .7% to 3046.

Currencies

The Dollar traded mostly higher on Monday. The Euro eased .1% to 1.3232, and both the Pound and Swiss Franc declined .2%. The Australian Dollar sank .5% to 1.0415 ahead of the central bank’s rate decision, and the Canadian Dollar dropped .6%, following disappointing GDP data. The Japanese Yen rallied .6%, breaking through the 80 price barrier to 79.83.

Economic Outlook

Midwest business activity slowed last month according to the Chicago PMI report, which fell to 56.2 from 62.2. Personal income rose .4%, more than expected, while personal spending rose .3%, less than expected.

Dow Closes At Highest Level Since December 2007

Equities

Australia’s central bank, the RBA, cut interest rates by 50 basis points, more than expected, pushing up the ASX 200 by .8%. In contrast, the Nikkei tumbled 1.8% to 9351, as the recent advance in the Yen weighed on exporters. Honda and Toyota both fell more than 3.4%, and Sharp plunged 9.3% after releasing a disappointing outlook. Markets in greater China were closed for holidays. Factory activity in China rose to a 13-month high, according to the April PMI report.

Most European markets were closed for May Day holidays, but in the UK, the FTSE rallied 1.3% on light volume. Lloyd’s spiked 8.3% after releasing upbeat earnings, with profit more than doubling during the first quarter.

The Dow climbed to a 4-year high, ticking up 66 points to 13279, as US stocks gained. The S&P 500 climbed .6% to 1406, and the Nasdaq edged up .1% to 3050.

Currencies

The Australian Dollar slumped .9% to 1.0330, more than erasing the previous session’s gains, while most other currencies traded in narrow ranges. The Euro and Swiss Franc both eased less than .1%, and the Pound slipped .1% to 1.6217. The Yen declined .4% to 80.12, and the Canadian Dollar ticked up .1% to .9859.

Economic Outlook

Manufacturing activity increased to 54.8 from 53.4 according to the ISM’s PMI report. Construction spending rose less than expected, inching up .1% vs. forecasts for a .5% gain. Total auto sales were flat from last month at 14.4M, slightly below expectations.

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