The Delaware Gazette

Stock market posts best week of 2012

JOSHUA FREED

AP Busi­ness Writer

Stocks rose for the fourth day in a row on Fri­day, cap­ping their best week so far this year.

It was a relief for investors after the big drops of the pre­vi­ous week.

Stocks fell in morn­ing trad­ing, with the Dow Jones indus­trial aver­age down almost 63 points. But they turned around after the gov­ern­ment said busi­nesses are restock­ing their shelves faster than ana­lysts had expected.

The Com­merce Depart­ment said U.S. whole­sale stock­piles grew 0.6 per­cent in April. That’s twice as fast as they grew in March and a sign that busi­nesses are order­ing enough goods to lead to increased fac­tory pro­duc­tion and sales. Investors had been braced for more slug­gish growth.

Oil fell 72 cents to $84.10 per bar­rel. Sure, it was pushed down by long-term eco­nomic wor­ries. But lower energy costs help consumers.

“If you had some doubts about an eco­nomic recov­ery, oil in the $80s is a lot bet­ter than oil at $110,” said Jim Duni­gan, man­ag­ing exec­u­tive of invest­ments for PNC Wealth Man­age­ment in Philadel­phia. Oil traded just below $110 in late February.

The Dow fin­ished 93.24 points higher, or three-quarters of a per­cent, at 12,554.20. It ended the week up almost 3.6 percent.

The Stan­dard & Poor’s 500 index rose 10.67 points, or 0.81 per­cent, to close at 1,325.66. The Nas­daq com­pos­ite rose 27.40 points, or 0.97 per­cent, to close at 2,858.42.

Nine out of the ten indus­try groups in the S&P 500 rose. Only energy stocks declined, fol­low­ing energy prices lower.

Wal-Mart Stores was the biggest gainer in the Dow, up $2.35, or 3.6 per­cent, at $68.22. Other com­pa­nies that depend heav­ily on a strong econ­omy grew too, includ­ing Intel, up 47 cents, or 1.8 per­cent, at $26.41, and Gen­eral Elec­tric, up 20 cents, or 1 per­cent, to $19.20. Home Depot rose $1.11, or 2.2 per­cent, to $52.35.

Face­book rose 79 cents, or 3 per­cent, to $27.10 after announc­ing an “app cen­ter” that will rec­om­mend new add-on soft­ware for users. Any­thing that boosts user inter­ac­tion is likely to help it sell more ads, which has been a key con­cern for investors in its new stock, which debuted three weeks ago at $38.

Chesa­peake Energy share­hold­ers pun­ished their direc­tors and were rewarded by the mar­ket. The stock rose 51 cents, or 2.9 per­cent, to $18.36 after share­holder votes prompted the res­ig­na­tions of two direc­tors at the company’s annual meet­ing Fri­day. Ear­lier in the day the com­pany said it will sell pipeline assets in three deals for a total of more than $4 bil­lion in cash.

Nav­is­tar Inter­na­tional rose $4.25, or 17.6 per­cent, to $28.36 after the activist investor Carl Icahn boosted his stake in the truck maker.

Mar­kets fell in Asia. Shanghai’s stock index lost a half-percent, its fifth day of losses. Japan’s Nikkei fell 2.1 percent.

Chi­nese lead­ers have been show­ing signs of urgency ahead of May trade and indus­trial data due out this week­end that might be even weaker than ear­lier pes­simistic fore­casts. The Chi­nese gov­ern­ment cut inter­est rates for the first time in four years and has reduced gaso­line and diesel prices for the sec­ond time in a month.

Over the long run, that will put more money in the pock­ets of Chi­nese con­sumers. In the short run it’s a sign that the gov­ern­ment is wor­ried about growth.

“That shows they’re being proac­tive, but on the other hand, it also makes you won­der, what’s the data is really like?” said Uri Lan­des­man, pres­i­dent of Plat­inum Part­ners. “I’m won­der­ing how bad the data’s going to be. I’d be very sur­prised if it’s good.”

China is a key U.S. trade part­ner so its growth is impor­tant to U.S. com­pa­nies. Its impor­tance is mag­ni­fied by the pos­si­bil­ity that Europe’s econ­omy will go from slow growth to shrink­age, Lan­des­man said.

Major Euro­pean mar­kets fell, although their declines were smaller after the U.S. inven­tory news came out. France’s bench­mark index lost 0.6 per­cent, Britain’s and Germany’s each dropped 0.2 percent.

AP News Posted by on Jun 8 2012. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Comments can be made below.

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