Stocks suffered through another listless session, though on much higher volume, finishing the day and the week in the red on all major indices excepting the NASDAQ which finished above the break even line both on the daily and weekly measure.
It was the second straight week that the market had closed lower, though the extent of the losses were marginalized by Thursday's strong showing.
The weekly figures are: Dow, -101 points; NASDAQ, +11; S&P 500, -2; NYSE Comp., -27.
Dow 8,438.39, -34.01 (0.40%)
NASDAQ 1,838.22, +8.68 (0.47%)
S&P 500 918.90, -1.36 (0.15%)
NYSE Composite 5,906.96, -4.07 (0.07%)
Advancers continued their trend of dominating the losing issues, 3961-2356. New highs beat out new lows for the second straight session, 129-58. That is the largest number of new highs on any single day since the middle of 2007, just about two years ago. Those new high-new low numbers are a little difficult to believe, especially since the Dow stood above 11,300 at this time a year ago.
As mentioned above, the volume numbers were rather outsized as compared to recent days. That level of volume could mean that funds are doing some early window dressing (or house cleaning) as the quarter - and the month - comes near a close. Tuesday will be the final trading day for June and the 2nd quarter. Nearly half of Friday's volume came in the final minutes of trading, making the numbers all the more suspicious.
NYSE Volume 2,310,427,000
NASDAQ Volume 3,659,184,000
Oil took a breather, losing $1.07, to $69.16. Gold continued to trend slowly higher, gaining $1.50, to $941.00. Silver tacked on 12 cents to close at $14.16.
Following Thursday's powerful move, Friday's action has to be considered a complete flop. There simply was no continuation of the rally, not surprising in this environment. That late day volume spike is strange, though and may have been a rebalancing by index funds or something to do with Cisco and the Travelers being added to the Dow, but it is probably something more nefarious than that.
Investors are still a little bit rattled and unsure, as there have been an equal number of encouraging and discouraging sings in economic data of late. Next week may well be more of the same slow pace, especially leading up to the Independence Day Holiday, with all exchanges closed on Friday, July 3.
Blog Archive
-
►
2011
(2135)
- October (60)
- August (110)
- July (446)
- June (377)
- May (580)
- April (282)
- March (134)
- February (120)
- January (26)
-
►
2010
(261)
- December (24)
- November (21)
- October (22)
- September (23)
- August (21)
- July (20)
- June (23)
- May (22)
- April (20)
- March (24)
- February (20)
- January (21)
-
▼
2009
(254)
- December (22)
- November (25)
- October (21)
- September (19)
- August (17)
- July (19)
- June (22)
- May (20)
- April (21)
- March (22)
- February (23)
- January (23)
-
►
2008
(533)
- December (22)
- November (18)
- October (22)
- September (26)
- August (21)
- July (24)
- June (21)
- May (50)
- April (22)
- March (98)
- February (187)
- January (22)
Labels
Forex Trading
Forex Indicators
Forex
Forex Candlestick Chart Patterns
gold
silver
Economy
Finance and Investment
oil
Ben Bernanke
Business Opportunities
Custom Indicators
Bank of America
RSI
Goldman Sachs
Relative Strength Index
Moving Average
non-farm payroll
Forex Analysis
JP Morgan Chase
BAC
banks
Greece
foreclosures
Bollinger Bands
GDP
Plunge Protection Team
Google
Nasdaq
Obama
President Obama
interest rates
employment
housing
JPM
MACD
Moving Average Convergence Divergence
Real Estate
retail sales
Bernanke
INTC
Insurance
Intel
Treasury
European Union
Ireland
inflation
jobs
oil futures
Forex Education
GM
Linear Regression Channel
Mortgage
Pivot Support Resistance
Stock to buy
Stocks Alerts
existing home sales
Dow Jones
Durable Orders
General Motors
Oil Gas
eBay
mortgage defaults
Forex News
IBM
TA analysis
bonds
cash
central banks
earnings
liquidity
recession
Biggest Losers
Biggest Gainers
John Boehner
Market Future
Market Updates
housing starts
Exxon-Mobil
ISM
Internet Marketing
Loan
Penny Stock
Bailout
Big Oil
Fannie Mae
Freddie Mac
Great Depression
JNJ
Microsoft
US stocks
bank failures
budget
credit cards
median home prices
mortgages
Ben Bernake
Caterpillar
Earning date
George Orwell
Santa Claus Rally
Technology
bank regulations
bull market
penny stocks
stock market
Barack Obama
Berkshire Hathaway
Black Friday
Cerberus
Facebook
Fool's Gold
Money Talk
Mortgage news
Nikkei
Secured loans
bargain stocks
foreign currencies trading
forex market trading
free credit report
graduate loans
investment
mortgage payments
real estate tools
retest
retirement
No comments:
Post a Comment