Major indices eke out record closes 17-Dec-19 16:15 ET
Dow +31.27 at 28267.07, Nasdaq +9.13 at 8823.37, S&P +1.07 at 3192.52
briefing.com
[BRIEFING.COM] The S&P 500 finished flat (+0.03%) on Tuesday in a tight-ranged, and lackluster, session. It was still technically a record close, though, joining the Dow Jones Industrial Average (+0.1%) and Nasdaq Composite (+0.1%) further in record territory. The Russell 20000 outperformed with a 0.5% gain.
It was a relatively quiet session in terms of new developments, but the better-than-expected November readings for housing starts, building permits, and industrial production helped reinforce the market's positive economic outlook. Fittingly, the cyclical S&P 500 consumer discretionary (+0.6%) and financials (+0.5%) sectors outperformed the broader market.
Six of the 11 sectors did finish lower, though, with the weakest performer being the real estate sector (-1.2%). No other sector finished down more than 0.2% (information technology).
Shares of Boeing (BA 327.00, unch, unch) were volatile after the company confirmed it will suspend 737 MAX production starting in January. Separately, Johnson & Johnson (JNJ 143.56, +1.77, +1.3%) was upgraded to Overweight from Equal-Weight at Morgan Stanley, and Eli Lilly (LLY 125.33, +2.48, +2.0%) provided upside FY20 guidance.
In M&A activity, LogMeIn (LOGM 85.95, +3.54, +4.3%) agreed to be acquired by affiliates of Francisco Partners and Evergreen Coast Capital for $4.3 billion in cash. Tallgrass Energy (TGE 22.14, +3.85, +21.1%) agreed to be taken private by Blackstone (BX 54.58, +0.05, +0.1%) in a $6.3 billion deal.
On the earnings front, Jabil (JBL 43.43, +2.79, +6.9%) topped expectations and raised its FY20 guidance, while Navistar (NAV 28.97, -3.38, -10.5%) missed revenue estimates.
U.S. Treasuries finished little changed. Both the 2-yr yield and 10-yr yield remained unchanged at 1.63% and 1.89%, respectively. The U.S. Dollar Index increased 0.2% to 97.22. WTI crude rose 1.2%, or $0.69, to $60.90/bbl.
Reviewing Tuesday's economic data, which included Housing Starts and Building Permits for November:
- Total housing starts increased 3.2% m/m to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.365 million (Briefing.com consensus 1.340 million) while total building permits increased 1.4% m/m to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.482 million (Briefing.com consensus 1.400 million).
- The report contained some noise, yet the key takeaway is that single-family starts (+2.4%) and permits (+0.8%) recorded solid increases.
- Industrial production increased 1.1% in November (Briefing.com consensus 0.8%) after declining a revised 0.9% (from -0.8%) in October. The capacity utilization rate increased to 77.3% (Briefing.com consensus 77.4%) from a revised 76.6% (from 76.7%) in October.
- The key takeaway from the report is the November rebound was fueled by the end of the strike at GM. Excluding motor vehicles and parts, industrial production increased 0.5%.
- The October Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey showed job openings increase to 7.267 million from a revised 7.032 million in September (from 7.024 million).
Looking ahead, investors will receive the MBA Mortgage Applications Index on Wednesday.
- Nasdaq Composite +33.0% YTD
- S&P 500 +27.4% YTD
- Russell 2000 +22.9% YTD
- Dow Jones Industrial Average +21.2% YTD
Market Snapshot | Dow | 28267.07 | +31.27 | (0.11%) | | Nasdaq | 8823.37 | +9.13 | (0.10%) | | SP 500 | 3192.52 | +1.07 | (0.03%) | | 10-yr Note | -1/32 | 1.882 |
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| | NYSE | Adv 1804 | Dec 1073 | Vol 935.9 mln | | Nasdaq | Adv 1760 | Dec 1390 | Vol 2.2 bln |
Industry Watch | Strong: Financials, Consumer Discretionary |
| | Weak: Real Estate |
Moving the Market -- Major indices eke out record closes in lackluster session
-- Better-than-expected housing starts, building permits, and industrial production for November
-- Relative strength in the financials and consumer discretionary sectors
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WTI crude gains 1% 17-Dec-19 15:25 ET
Dow +59.69 at 28295.49, Nasdaq +9.81 at 8824.05, S&P +2.67 at 3194.12 [BRIEFING.COM] The S&P 500 continues to tread water with a 0.1% gain. The benchmark index has traded within a narrow, eight-point range today.
One last look at the S&P 500 sectors shows the financials (+0.7%), consumer discretionary (+0.5%), and utilities (+0.4%) sectors outperforming the broader market, while the real estate sector (-1.1%) is the only sector down more than 0.5%.
WTI crude settled up $0.69 (+1.2%) to $60.90/bbl. |