Market Recap: Bullish Post-Fed Mood Gives Way to Eleventh-Hour Plunge

An upbeat afternoon for the equities market was erased in the final half-hour

by Elizabeth Harrow (eharrow@sir-inc.com) 11/4/2009 4:30 PM


Stocks started the day on solid footing, boosted by a respectable jobs report from Automatic Data Processing (ADP). The payroll firm announced that the private sector cut 203,000 jobs in October, marking the slimmest decline since July 2008. While traders paid close attention to this data ahead of Friday's nonfarm payroll report from the Labor Department, today's marquee economic release was the latest policy decision from the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC). The group unanimously voted to keep interest rates near their current, rock-bottom levels, citing their belief that "economic conditions, including low rates of resource utilization, subdued inflation trends, and stable inflation expectations, are likely to warrant exceptionally low levels of the federal funds rate for an extended period." The equities market initially staggered following the announcement, paring early gains, before quickly resuming its journey into the black. However, profit-takers swooped in toward the end of the session, resulting in a mixed finish for the major market indexes.

CLOSING SUMMARY – INDICES

CLOSING SUMMARY – NYSE AND NASDAQ

The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA – 9,802.14) was up more than 156 points at its post-Fed intraday peak, but the index finished on a much slimmer gain of 30.2 points, or 0.3%. Nineteen of the Dow's 30 components maintained their perch on positive ground, led by Merck (MRK) and Microsoft (MSFT). Among the decliners, Kraft Foods (KFT) swallowed the steepest loss after falling short of third-quarter revenue expectations. The blue-chip barometer is currently in position to finish the week above its 10-week moving average.

The S&P 500 Index (SPX – 1,046.50) endured a similarly volatile afternoon. After rising nearly 16 points at its session high, the index settled for a final gain of just 1.1 points, or 0.1%. The SPX remains sandwiched between support from its 80-day moving average, and resistance from its 10-day trendline. Finally, the Nasdaq Composite (COMP – 2,055.52) was hit the hardest by the late-day sell-off, surrendering all of its daily gains by the close. The COMP was up 24 points this afternoon before a wave of selling pressure hit, leaving the tech-rich index to finish on a deficit of 1.8 points, or 0.1%.

Turning to equities in focus, Ambac Financial (ABK) rallied after posting an impressive third-quarter profit ... Priceline.com (PCLN) was singled out for a short put spread ahead of earnings ... Andrea Kramer explored the catalysts behind the surging popularity of options ... MEMC Electronic Materials (WFR) garnered heavy attention from call buyers ... The short call butterfly allows traders to capitalize on volatility in the underlying stock ... and today's Quote of the Day comes from Allan Sloan, Fortune's senior editor at large. Sloan was flabbergasted to learn that Davis Advisors, a major mutual fund management company, recently slashed its fees on a number of funds -- for no other reason than to cut investors a break. Sloan summarized the unusual turn of events for his readers:

"So there it is: Wall Street acting good. Next on the agenda: looking west to see the sun rise."

But these weren't the only headlines hitting the Street today. Click on the links below for our Daily Option Blog coverage of:

And, in case you missed it, Joseph Hargett sized up the prospects for Caterpillar (CAT) in this week's installment of The Casual Contrarian. Click here to watch the video.

For today's activity in crude oil, gold futures, options, and more, turn to page 2.

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