Traders were back on the buying table Tuesday, adding to their holdings even as they remained glued to the Fed for its take on the economy, interest rates and inflation. Banks and industrial companies led the advance as stocks zoomed to new highs for 2009. Nevertheless, uncertainty remained if the Central Bank will offer any detail on an exit strategy.
The 30-share Dow Jones industrial average finished higher by 51 points, or 0.52%, at 9,829.87. The broad Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index gained 7 points, or 0.66%, at 1,071.66 and the technology-laden Nasdaq composite index gained 8.26 points, or 0.39%, to 2,146.30. Treasury prices rallied after the government’s successful auction of $43 billion in two-year notes.
Meanwhile, dollar continued its downward spiral against other major currencies, sending energy and material shares higher. Gold and crude prices also advanced. Gold reached $1014 per ounce, up $12.50, and oil, after a 3.3% plunge Monday, went above the $70 level, rising 2.6% to $71.55. Volume on the NYSE was a modest 1.27 billion shares, with advancing shares ahead of decliners by a seven-to-three margin.
Among the ten S&P500 industry sectors, seven closed higher, led by financial shares (+2.2%), basic materials (+1.9%), industrials (+0.8%). On the downside, telecommunication shares fell 0.6%, health care stocks eased 0.3%, and utilities edged 0.1% lower.
Twenty of the DJIA’s thirty components finished higher yesterday. On the Dow average, JP Morgan (NYSE:JPM) was the leading gainer, rallying 4.3% to $46.47 after analysts at Bank of America (NYSE:BAC) lifted their third-quarter earnings estimate on the firm to 49 cents per share from 46 cents per share. Caterpillar (NYSE:CAT) shares jumped 3.6%, following the expected weak dollar benefit to foreign sales. Bank of America (NYSE:BAC) rose 2.1% after Rochdale Securities’ Richard Bove raised the shares’ price target to $25 from $19 due to the firm’s recent moves to exit two federal guarantee programs. However, rumors that CEO Ken Lewis might resign over the Merrill bonus saga kept the stock’s move in check. Alcoa (NYSE:AA) rose 2.3% after analysts at Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS) raised price target on the firm, citing projections for higher aluminum prices.
Analyst upgrades also benefited shares of Macy’s (NYSE:M) (+5.1%); Citigroup (NYSE:C) lifted its rating on the shares to “buy” from “hold” on higher revenue expectations. US Steel (NYSE:X) shares increased 4.6% after Bank of America (NYSE:BAC) changed its recommendation on the stock to “neutral” from “underperform,” citing expectations the firm should return to profitability in 2010. Clorox (NYSE:CLX) shares gained 2.6% on speculation of a potential Procter & Gamble (NYSE:PG) bid. AIG (NYSE:AIG) shares fell 5.4% in a late-session sell-off on talks of a possible secondary offering. Goldman (NYSE:GS) shares rose 1.7% to $185.52, closing at its highest level since July 2008.
Of key interest today would be the much-expected FOMC policy report, due out at 2:15 ET. Expectations that the Fed will maintain record low interest rate levels of zero to 0.25% are intact. Most expect the Fed language to support an ongoing accommodative stance. Moreover, President Obama cautioned that unemployment could even get a little worse in coming months. Therefore, the Fed’s $1.75 trillion asset purchase program is likely to remain in place to encourage the recovery’s traction.