The Delaware Gazette

Stocks slip ahead of crucial Fed, ECB meetings

Trader William McIn­er­ney, cen­ter, works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange Tues­day. U.S. stocks are open­ing mostly lower ahead of a two-day pol­icy meet­ing at the Fed­eral Reserve. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)

PALLAVI GOGOI

AP Busi­ness Writer

NEW YORK — Stocks ended slightly lower Tues­day as investors held back ahead of three crit­i­cal events this week: pol­icy meet­ings at both the Fed­eral Reserve and the Euro­pean Cen­tral Bank and a closely watched report on jobs in the U.S.

The Dow Jones indus­trial aver­age lost 64.33 points to close at 13,008.68. The Stan­dard & Poor’s 500 edged down 5.98 points to 1,379.32, and the Nas­daq com­pos­ite lost 6.32 points to 2,939.52.

The Fed­eral Reserve, which started a two-day pol­icy meet­ing Tues­day, had appeared to be mov­ing toward announc­ing some kind of new step to ener­gize the U.S. econ­omy. But there were big ques­tions over whether it will do so this week.

That’s because some econ­o­mists believe the Fed isn’t con­vinced that the U.S. eco­nomic slow­down is pro­nounced enough yet to require more eco­nomic stim­u­lus. A slew of recent data that has shown weak­ness in the econ­omy has been off­set by some pock­ets of strength.

Tues­day was no exception.

The Com­merce Depart­ment reported that spend­ing by the U.S. con­sumer was unchanged in June. But per­sonal income edged up 0.5 percent.

“If incomes are ris­ing, but peo­ple aren’t spend­ing, it tells you that the con­sumer has some ammu­ni­tion for more spend­ing dur­ing the cru­cial back-to-school sea­son,” said Quincy Krosby, mar­ket strate­gist with Pru­den­tial Financial.

There were other pos­i­tive num­bers. The Stan­dard & Poor’s/Case-Shiller home price index released Tues­day showed that prices increases in all of the 20 cities it tracks. The Con­fer­ence Board said Con­sumer Con­fi­dence Index increased to its high­est read­ing since April, and bet­ter than econ­o­mists had forecast.

Investors were also closely watch­ing for the out­come from the Euro­pean Cen­tral Bank’s meet­ing on Thurs­day to dis­cuss con­crete steps to help coun­tries with crip­pling debt.

It will be the first meet­ing after ECB Pres­i­dent Mario Draghi said last Thurs­day that the cen­tral bank would do “what­ever it takes” to pre­serve the euro, send­ing mar­kets sharply higher. Over the fol­low­ing days, the lead­ers of Ger­many, France and Italy also said they would do all they can to pro­tect the 17-country cur­rency union. The com­ments raised expec­ta­tions that the ECB might step in to buy Span­ish and per­haps Ital­ian gov­ern­ment bonds to lower the bor­row­ing costs for those coun­tries, which have shot up to unsus­tain­ably high levels.

Investors were also wait­ing for the monthly unem­ploy­ment report on Fri­day, the most-watched gauge of how healthy the U.S. econ­omy is.

“There’s a lot to absorb this week, includ­ing two major announce­ments from two very impor­tant cen­tral banks and pay­roll data,” Krosby said.

Cor­po­rate earn­ings news did lit­tle to inspire investors. Aetna, the health insur­ance com­pany, reported a 15 per­cent slump in net income as ris­ing med­ical costs out­weighed a gain in rev­enue. Its stock fell $1.08, or almost 3 per­cent, to $36.06.

Archer Daniels Mid­land, ham­mered by record corn prices, reported a 25 per­cent drop in net income. The agri­cul­ture company’s stock fell $1.40, or 5 per­cent, to $26.09.

Bond yields ended slightly lower as traders waited for news from the Fed and the ECB. Investors are par­tic­u­larly inter­ested to see whether the Fed will change or extend its bond pur­chas­ing pro­gram. The yield on the bench­mark 10-year Trea­sury note fell to 1.47 per­cent from 1.50 per­cent late Mon­day. The euro also rose slightly against the dol­lar, to $1.23 from $1.22.

Among other stocks mak­ing big moves:

— Coach, the lux­ury hand­bag maker, fell $11.2, or 18.6 per­cent, to $49.33, the biggest loss in the S&P 500 index. The company’s rev­enue came in below ana­lysts’ fore­casts because of slower sales at North Amer­i­can fac­tory stores as con­sumers became more cau­tious about spending.

— U.S. Steel gained $1.73, or 9 per­cent, to $20.65. Higher prices and lower costs for raw mate­ri­als and energy helped the com­pany beat ana­lysts’ fore­casts despite chal­leng­ing eco­nomic con­di­tions, par­tic­u­larly in Europe.

— Goodyear Tire rose $1.08, or 10.4 per­cent, to $11.45. The company’s income more than dou­bled in the quar­ter after lower costs off­set a drop in tire sales and beat Wall Street’s expectations.

— Valero Energy rose $1.42, or 5.4 per­cent, to $27.50. The sec­ond quar­ter results from the gaso­line and petro­leum prod­ucts maker beat Wall Street profit fore­casts after the com­pany expanded its fuel-making oper­a­tion in the United King­dom, which helped the com­pany increase production.

AP News Posted by on Jul 31 2012. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Comments can be made below.

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