The Delaware Gazette

US stocks rise, and investors wait for the Fed

John San­ti­ago, left, works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. Futures are ris­ing after Germany’s high­est court rejected efforts to block a $640 bil­lion res­cue fund for Europe’s eco­nom­i­cally strug­gling nations and ahead of the meet­ing by the Fed­eral Reserve, which is expected to announce new stim­u­lus mea­sures to revive the U.S. econ­omy. (AP Photo/Richard Drew, File)

MATTHEW CRAFT

AP Busi­ness Writer

NEW YORK — The stock mar­ket edged higher Wednes­day after a court cleared the way for Ger­many to par­tic­i­pate in a Euro­pean res­cue fund. Atten­tion shifted to the Fed­eral Reserve, which began a big two-day meeting.

The high­est court in Ger­many ruled that the coun­try could con­tribute to Europe’s $640 bil­lion res­cue fund to help indebted gov­ern­ments. The rul­ing offered investors relief, but not much more.

The issue was “more speed bump than hur­dle,” Dan Green­haus, chief global strate­gist at the bro­ker­age BTIG, told clients. “More leg­isla­tive and polit­i­cal chal­lenges lay ahead. Today’s rul­ing sim­ply does noth­ing to change that larger story.”

The Dow Jones indus­trial aver­age climbed 9.99 points to close at 13,333.35, a four-year clos­ing high. The Stan­dard & Poor’s 500 index added an even 3 points to 1,436.56, also close to a four-year high.

The rul­ing helped push Germany’s main stock index, the DAX, to its high­est level since July of last year. The euro rose to a four-month high against the dollar.

When the Fed wraps up its meet­ing Thurs­day, investors and econ­o­mists expect it to announce new steps to stim­u­late eco­nomic growth, espe­cially after a Labor Depart­ment report showed employ­ers added fewer than 100,000 jobs last month.

Many investors are bank­ing that the Fed will com­mit to buy­ing more bonds and extend its pledge to keep short-term inter­est rates near zero until 2015. The Fed pre­vi­ously offered to keep them there until late 2014.

“Every­one is expect­ing the Fed to put the pedal to the metal,” said Jack Ablin, chief invest­ment offi­cer at Har­ris Pri­vate Bank in Chicago. “Any­thing short of that and we could have some seri­ous dis­ap­point­ment if the Fed doesn’t come through. No news will be bad news.”

Ablin was skep­ti­cal that the Fed would begin another bond-buying pro­gram. The Fed hatched two pre­vi­ous efforts when eco­nomic fig­ures looked bleaker than today. The first came in March 2009, right after the finan­cial cri­sis. Both pro­grams ignited stock rallies.

The econ­omy has plenty of prob­lems now, “but there are some great things hap­pen­ing, too,” Ablin said.

In fact, he was about to give a talk detail­ing rea­sons for opti­mism. Falling prices for nat­ural gas, for instance, could usher in a shift to a cheaper, cleaner fuel source for vehi­cles than crude oil. And the hous­ing mar­ket has begun to come back.

In other trad­ing Wednes­day, the tech-heavy Nas­daq com­pos­ite index climbed 9.78 points to 3,114.31. Apple’s stock added $9.20 to $669.79 fol­low­ing the unveil­ing of its lat­est, slim­mer iPhone.

Facebook’s stock jumped 8 per­cent. Mark Zucker­berg, the social net­work­ing company’s founder, report­edly said that Face­book would work on gen­er­at­ing profit from users who use the social net­work on their phones. The stock gained $1.50 to $20.93.

The Dow and the S&P 500, the bench­mark for most stock funds, have already surged about 2 per­cent in Sep­tem­ber, usu­ally a grim month for the stock market.

The indexes reached four-year highs last Thurs­day when news out of Europe set off a world­wide rally. The Euro­pean Cen­tral Bank laid out a con­crete plan to sup­port the region’s strug­gling coun­tries through buy­ing their gov­ern­ment bonds.

The Dow remains at its high­est level since Decem­ber 2007, the begin­ning of the Great Reces­sion. It’s 6 per­cent shy of the all-time high it hit two months ear­lier, in Octo­ber 2007.

AP News Posted by on Sep 12 2012. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Comments can be made below.

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