Skip to main content

Market Overview

Stock Market News for January 14, 2010 - Market News

Share:

Financial shares led the stock market higher Wednesday as heads of several big Wall Street banks testified before a committee set up to investigate the causes of the financial crisis.  Although several executive admitted to missteps that led to the financial mayhem, the hearing, barring a few aggressive exchanges, went on with little confrontation.   

Executives appearing before the bipartisan Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission included Goldman Sachs' (NYSE:GS) Lloyd Blankfein, Bank of America's (NYSE:BA) Brian Moynihan, Morgan Stanley's (NYSE:MS) John Mack and JP Morgan Chase's (NYSE:JPM) Jamie Dimon. 

This morning’s US stock market futures suggest a mixed start in early trade as traders look to bellwethers Intel (NASDAQ:INTC) and JP Morgan’s  (NYSE:JPM) numbers, and also word from Washington on the nature of its planned Street tax.  Reports suggest the fiscal 2011 budget, to be unveiled at 11:50 am this morning, will place a levy of 15 bps, or 0.15 percentage points, on balance sheets of large firms with assets of more than $50 billion.  The plan is expected to raise $90-$120 billion over the first ten years.

Yesterday, the Dow Jones industrial average rose 53.51 points, or 0.50%, to 10,680.77, closing at its highest level since October 1, 2008.  The broader Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index rose 9.46 points, or 0.83%, to 1.145.68, and the Nasdaq rose 25.59 points, or 1.12%, to 2,307.90.

Merck & Co. (NYSE:MRK) led the healthcare sector higher and was the leading gainer on the DJIA, helped by a Credit Suisse (NYSE:CS) upgrade to “outperform" from “neutral."  Credit Suisse cited “new interest" coming from the company’s pipeline for the upgrade.

The 10-month old rally in the stock market has driven the S&P500 69% from its 12-year closing lows of early March.  Rising risk appetites have sent stock markets higher as central banks worldwide have adopted accommodative policy measures.  However, signals that China is moving towards a tighter lending regime raised a red flag on prospects for rising interest rates. 

The Treasury is scheduled to auction the final leg of its $84 billion issuance this week, with $13 billion in 30-years.  Yesterday's $21 billion in 10-years met with uninspiring demand, and Treasuries fell in price on the day, with the 10-year closing off 20/32 as its yield rose to 3.793%.

This morning New York Fed President Dudley noted the "extended period" of low interest rates will likely be translated into more than six months and possibly two years.

Zacks Investment Research

The preceding article is from one of our external contributors. It does not represent the opinion of Benzinga and has not been edited.

 

Related Articles (BA + CS)

View Comments and Join the Discussion!