What's the Market's Next Move?
by Sam Collins 10/16/09
It seems that every day the market brings a familiar sector to the forefront. Yesterday it was energy again, picking up where financials and technology left off the day before. It may be a limited type of rotation, but it seems to be working as the Dow Jones Industrial average (DJI) rises to new heights.
Yesterday stocks bounced back and forth between lower and slightly lower until just before the close when higher crude oil prices drove up oil and gas equipment, drillers and refiners with a rush of buyers. Refiners were up 8%, oil and gas equipment rose 3.4%, and oil and gas drillers gained 3.2%.
And the heavy buying in energy stocks drove the rest of the market forward, closing the indices near the highs of the day.
Economic data had a big part in yesterday's trading. The New York Fed Empire State Manufacturing Index for October came in at 34.57, topping the expectation of just 17.25 versus the index for October, which was 11.5. This was the third straight increase, something that hasn't happened in almost two years.
At the close, the Dow was up 47 points to 10,063, the S&P 500 (SPX) rose 5 points to 1,097, and the Nasdaq (NASD) gained a point to close at 2,173.
The NYSE traded 1.4 billion shares with advancers over decliners by a slim margin. The Nasdaq traded 682 million shares, but decliners there were ahead by almost 3-to-2.
Crude oil futures had a big day with the November contract rising $2.40 to $77.58 a barrel after a sharp drop in U.S. gasoline stocks.
December gold fell victim to profit-taking yesterday, with the December delivery falling $14.10 and closing at $1,050.0 an ounce. The PHLX Gold/Silver Index (XAU) closed at $175.96, off $3.28.
What the Markets Are Saying
As the market closes in on the bearish resistance line at just under S&P 500 1,120, it is a good idea to take a backward look at the price movement of charts, which show the current trend lines.
The bull channel that I talk about every day began forming on April 28 at 855, and since then established five points of support with just one violation -- the sell-off from June 16 to July 8, during which prices hit the 200-day moving average for the last time.
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