Interessantes aus den USA
U.S. stock futures point lower for second day
By Steve Goldstein, MarketWatch
Last update: 8:12 a.m. EST Jan. 31, 2008
LONDON (MarketWatch) -- U.S. stock futures pointed to another day of declines on Thursday, with the trouble bond insurance industry back in the spotlight after MBIA posted a $2.3 billion loss.
S&P 500 futures fell 3.8 points, with the Nasdaq 100 futures down 8.75 points to 1,802.75 after a disappointing outlook from Amazon.com. Dow industrial futures fell 59 points.
U.S. stocks ended lower in a wild session on Wednesday, as an initial surge following an as-expected half-point rate cut fizzled out amid renewed concerns about the health of the bond insurance industry. Should bond insurer credit ratings fall, the securities they guarantee also may be downgraded, which could trigger further write-downs from companies that hold such securities.
The Dow industrials ended 37 points lower, the S&P 500 dropped 6.5 points and the Nasdaq Composite lost 9 points.
After the Fed decision on Wednesday, there will be figures on core personal expenditure in December, an inflation measure on which the Fed puts emphasis. Data on personal spending, weekly jobless claims and a Chicago-area manufacturing gauge also are due for release.
Crude-oil futures continued to lose ground in electronic trading, down $1.07 to $91.26 a barrel.
The dollar edged lower against the Japanese yen and the euro.
Amazon.com (AMZN: 74.21, +0.26, +0.4%) dropped 11% in Frankfurt, as it more than doubled its fourth-quarter profit, but its operating margin for the quarter, and its outlook for this year, disappointed investors. See full story.
"The weakness in gross margins has been disappointing over the last two quarters, and with little faith that margins will improve in 2008 we cannot recommend investor buy shares," said Brian Bolan, director of research at Jackson Securities, in a note to clients.
MBIA (MBI:) reported a $2.3 billion loss during the fourth quarter, after taking a big loss for the securities it guarantees due to the U.S. housing downturn. See full story.
Novellus (NVLS:) may lose some ground after the chip-equipment maker said first-quarter revenue may be up to 11% below analyst estimates.
Among other heavyweights detailing earnings early Thursday, Procter & Gamble (PG:) reported a 14% rise in quarterly profit to $3.27 billion and also revealed plans to spin-off its coffee unit.
Colgate-Palmolive Co.'s (CL:) fourth-quarter net income edged up to $414.9 million as sales rose 13% to $3.64 billion, topping expectations. It also predicted double-digit earnings growth in 2008.
Still to come are earnings from Bristol-Myers Squibb (BMY:) , and after the closing bell, Google (GOOG:) .
Asian markets traded erratically, though Japan's Nikkei closed up 1.9%. The FTSE 100 dropped 1.4% in London.
Jobless claims surge in latest week
Claims jump 69,000 to 375,000, highest level since Oct.
By Greg Robb, MarketWatch
Last update: 8:56 a.m. EST Jan. 31, 2008
WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) -- First-time jobless claims rocketed higher last week.
Initial claims rose 69,000 to 375,000 in the week ended Jan. 26, the Labor Department reported Thursday. This is the highest level since early October and the biggest gain since September 2005 in the wake of Hurricane Katrina. Read government release.
Before this sharp rise, jobless claims had fallen by a net of 51,000 since late December, confounding economists who had expected claims to gradually rise as the economy slowed.
Analysts had been expecting an increase but nothing as large as last week's gain.
The consensus forecast of Wall Street economists was for claims to rise to about 320,000. See Economic Calendar.
Stocks futures fell steeply in the wake of the claims data.
A Labor Department official attributed the large increase to difficulties adjusting to the Martin Luther King Jr. federal holiday.
The average number of workers filing claims over the past four weeks rose by 10,250 to 325,750 last week.
The four-week average is considered a better gauge of the labor market than the volatile weekly number.
The claims data measure the number of workers who lost their jobs through no fault of their own and were eligible for unemployment benefits. They reflect layoffs, not hiring.
The report comes one day before the January unemployment report, which will be watched closely for an indication of how much the economy is slowing down.
A survey conducted by Automated Data Processing reported that 130,000 private sector jobs were created in the month.
As a result many economists are raising their forecasts for tomorrow's number to about 100,000 jobs from previous estimates around 70,000 jobs.
In the week ending Jan. 19, the number of workers still collecting benefits rose 47,000 to 2.72 million.
The four-week moving of continuing claims fell 9,500 to 2.71 million.
In a separate report, Labor said that the employment cost index rose 0.8% in the fourth quarter, the same pace as in the prior three-month period.
In addition, the Commerce Department reported that real consumer spending flattened out in December, further evidence that the economy was getting weaker as the fourth quarter sputtered to an end.
Real consumer spending, adjusted for inflation, was unchanged in December following a 0.4% gain in November.
Commentary: Bankers' and brokers' greed has undermined our economy
By Bill Donoghue, MarketWatch
Last update: 7:15 p.m. EST Jan. 30, 2008
SEATTLE (MarketWatch) -- Call this the perfect financial storm or what you will; Wall Street has made fools of financial institutions around the world with their CMOs, CDOs, and greedy boo-boos.
At least they didn't lose as much as their customers. The stock market is in distress, bond insurers are looking for a $200 billion bailout, junk-bond markets are at risk of further losses and life-, home- and auto insurers' risk has not yet been fully assessed.
We need real ready-to-go financial leadership and we need it now. Tell the presidential candidates, Congress and economists to stay home. We need regulators with clear priorities.
Former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker, former FDIC Chairman Bill Isaacs and anyone they trust would be good choices. They beat inflation and presided over the savings and loan cleanup. Tell Ben Bernanke to go home.
As for you personally, it's every person for themselves and their family. Study the charts: This is a bear market.
The worm turns
The Wall Street worms have made our economy rotten to the core. Combine dazed and confused credit markets with globalization, and our economy is in a bind. A Fed rate cut won't turn things around for more than a week.
Money is available now ($4 trillion in deferred income taxes) if U.S. leaders are willing to act decisively.
To protect your wealth, you have to confidently and objectively keep in mind what will rise in value in today's crisis. Sell short, reallocate assets, use leverage and whatever other tools and techniques are needed. Protect your own retirement savings and don't count on the government for support.
Stocks in pain
The Fed's rate cuts are only bandages. They'll succeed at weakening the U.S. dollar against foreign currencies, and that encourages foreign governments to buy American institutions at fire-sale prices. That can't be good for America.
From 2000-2002 stocks slid slowly down this slippery slope and the pain was excruciating. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index has barely broken even so far in this century and we're in a bear market. A shift to cash or investing in mutual funds or exchange-traded funds tied to the inverse of the major stock indices would be wise. Inverse ETFs go up when the index goes down and leveraged inverse-ETFs go up twice as much in the same situation.
The next shoe to drop could come in late February when insurance companies have to 'fess up on their portfolio holdings. It's unlikely to improve their stock prices and safety ratings.
Two ways to diversify and profit from any unsettling financial-services news ahead: Sell iShares Dow Jones U.S. Insurance Index Fund (IAK:) short, or buy the double-beta inverse ETF ProShares UltraShort Financials ETF.
Outlook may be muted, as Web giant refuses to issue financial guidance
By John Letzing, MarketWatch
Last update: 1:12 p.m. EST Jan. 31, 2008
SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) -- Google Inc. is expected to report double-digit percentage gains in both profit and sales when it posts fiscal fourth-quarter financial results after the markets close Thursday.
Investors nervous about the outlook for technology firms in 2008 will have to look elsewhere, however, as the Web search giant has a long-standing practice of not giving financial guidance for future periods. But analysts will still be able to hear any commentary from Google relating to the online advertising business, given the recent troubles in the U.S. economy.
Analysts polled by Thomson Financial estimate Google (GOOG: 555.90, +7.63, +1.4%) will post earnings of $4.44 a share, on $3.45 billion in revenue. In the same period last year, Google reported earnings of $3.29 a share and $2.23 billion in revenue.
Thomas Weisel analyst Christa Quarles wrote in a note to clients that she doesn't anticipate a slowdown for Google's advertising sales, even if the economy worsens.
"A consumer slowdown could be offset at Google through ongoing [search] query share gains and strong performances from the company's international franchises," Quarles wrote.
Citigroup analyst Mark Mahaney said in his own report that Google remains "one of the best plays off the secular growth in Internet advertising."
Like other tech stocks, Google has sold off sharply in the past three months. The stock has slid 35% since peaking around the $740 mark in early November. It now trades around the $550 mark.
Mahaney maintains a $775 price target on the shares. He notes that Google continues to take a bigger share of the Internet search market, and numerous growth opportunities remain for the company, including video and mobile advertising.
Google's planned acquisition of online advertising company DoubleClick could also dramatically expand its reach, Mahaney wrote, though the deal has not yet been approved by European antitrust regulators.
One area of concern for analysts has been Google's participation in a current government auction of wireless spectrum. A minimum bid of $4.6 billion is required for the portion of spectrum Google is thought to be interested in, called the "C block." That has raised questions about the financial impact of Google's participation, in addition to concerns about what exactly the company would do with any spectrum it might acquire.
Bidding on the C block reached $4.29 billion as of Wednesday, according to Federal Communications Commission data, though the identity of individual bidders is not being publicly disclosed.
"Adding a $4.6 billion spectrum bill would alter [Google's] valuation equation substantially," Quarles wrote. She added, however, that "the Street assumes Google will bid to the reserve price, but won't 'bid to win' the spectrum."
Financials look to end January flat after Thursday rally
By Greg Morcroft, MarketWatch
Last update: 3:42 p.m. EST Jan. 31, 2008
NEW YORK (MarketWatch) -- Financial stocks rounded out a wild January on Thursday, closing higher for the day but after fighting off early session losses, but the the broad measure of large financial shares clsoed flat for the month.
The Financial Select Sector SPDR Fund (XLF: 29.02, +1.02, +3.6%) , an ETF that tracks the financial stocks in the S&P 500, rose 3.5% after calming comments from troubled bond insurer MBIA Inc. offered investors some relief.
But over the course of January, the benchmark guage closed just about flat, as outsize gains in some shares, like Washington Mutual, E-Trade , offsett big losses in firms like Ambac, InterContinntal Exhange and Countrywide .
For the week to date, the XLF is up about 7%.
The early selloff was triggered by a more than $2 billion fourth-quarter loss at bond-insurer MBIA Inc and a higher-than expected number of first-time jobless claims that rattled investors.
But, MBIA traded up more than 9% after the bond insurer tried to assure investors and analysts that it has enough liquidity to ride out the meltdown in the mortgage market.
The company said in a presentation that it had more than $1.5 billion of liquidity at the end of 2007. That includes cash and investments, revolving credit and dividends from its insurance units and investments.
MBIA projected that it will have to use about $229 million of that liquidity, leaving it with more than $1.3 billion, according to the presentation. Rival Ambac's shares rose about 1% after dipping 5% in earlier trade.
MBIA earlier reported a fourth-quarter loss of $2.3 billion, or $18.61 per share, on significantly wider spreads and ratings downgrades of securities backing collateralized debt obligations. It earned $181 million in the year-ago quarter.
Chart of ABK
MBIA also said it secured a commitment from Warburg Pincus to backstop a $500 million rights offering, and it is considering this and other steps to raise equity.
First-time jobless claims rocketed higher last week.
Initial claims for state unemployment benefits rose 69,000 in the week ended Jan. 26, reaching 375,000, the Labor Department reported Thursday. It marked the highest level since early October -- and the biggest weekly jump since September 2005 in the wake of Hurricane Katrina.
The Amex Securities Broker/Dealer Index and the KBW Bank Sector Index rose 3.3% and 3.6% respectively.
Chart of XLF
A note from rating agency Standard & Poor's was also weighing on the banking sector. In the note, S&P suggested that financial institutions total writeoffs might hit $265 billion, far more than the more that $100 million they have already written off.
"In our opinion, the downgrades of mortgage securities could lead to the realization of those losses, especially among some of the smaller players that have yet to feel the full extent of the value impairments on securities held in their available-for-sale securities portfolios," S&P said.
Among the financial stocks in the Dow Jones Industrial Average, banks Citigroup and J.P. Morgan rose 3.6% and 0.6% and 0.6% respectively. Insurer American International Group aded 1.3% and consumer and specialty finance firm American Express rose 5.6%.
Among European firms listed in the U.S., shares of Swiss banking giant UBS fell 6.6%
Morgan Stanley cut UBS to underweight from equal weight on Thursday, citing ongoing concerns about the earnings and balance sheet impact of massive de-leveraging and de-risking of the bank's mortgage-heavy balance sheet.
"We still see material headline risk from subprime and other asset concerns, monolines and low investment bank visibility," the broker said. UBS shares fell 8% in Switzerland.
22:31 31.01.08
Moountain View (aktiencheck.de AG) - Die Google Inc. (ISIN US38259P5089/ WKN A0B7FY) hat am Donnerstag nach US-Börsenschluss die Zahlen für das vierte Quartal 2007 veröffentlicht. Dabei konnte der Internet-Suchmaschinen-Betreiber erneut einen deutlichen Umsatz- und Gewinnanstieg erzielen, verfehlte jedoch die Erwartungen.
Das Nettoergebnis belief sich demnach auf 1,21 Mrd. Dollar bzw. 3,79 Dollar je Aktie, nach 1,03 Mrd. Dollar bzw. 3,29 Dollar je Aktie im Vorjahreszeitraum. Das bereinigte EPS belief sich auf 4,43 Dollar. Die Analysten hatten im Vorfeld ein EPS von durchschnittlich 4,45 Dollar erwartet.
Die Umsatzerlöse stiegen von 3,21 Mrd. Dollar auf 4,83 Mrd. Dollar. Die um Zahlungen an Partner bereinigten Umsatzzahlen erhöhten sich auf 3,39 Mrd. Dollar. Analysten hatte zuvor Umsätze von 3,45 Mrd. Dollar erwartet.
Für das derzeit laufende erste Quartal 2008 erwarten die Analysten ein EPS von 4,84 Dollar bei Umsätzen von 3,77 Mrd. Dollar.
Die Google-Aktie schloss heute an der NASDAQ bei 564,30 Dollar. Nachbörslich verliert der Titel 8,18 Prozent 518,16 Dollar. (31.01.2008/ac/n/a)
Quelle: aktiencheck.de
By Sarah Turner
Last update: 4:52 a.m. EST Feb. 1, 2008
LONDON (MarketWatch) -- The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries will keep current output levels unchanged at 29.67 million barrels a day, a delegate told Dow Jones Newswires on Friday. The group will review production levels again on March 5. End of Story
Die Zinssenkungen der US-Notenbank scheinen zu wirken. Anleger sollten dennoch Sicherungsarbeiten am Depot erwägen – und Chancen nutzen.
von Sven Parplies
Große Gesten sind nicht seine Sache. Der dichte Bart macht es noch schwerer, den Gemütszustand von Ben Bernanke zu erahnen. Doch es muss brodeln in Ben Bernanke: Kollabierende Immobilienpreise, schwächelnde Konjunktur und verunsicherte Aktienmärkte haben auch den Chef der amerikanischen Notenbank, exakt zur Halbzeit seiner Amtsperiode, in die Schusslinie gebracht. Am Freitag kamen die neuesten Arbeitsmarktdaten aus den USA. Der Arbeitsmarkt ist eingebrochen. Erstmals seit vier Jahre bauten die US-Unternehmen Jobs ab. Zu spät habe er reagiert, dann zu panisch, sagen Kritiker. Immerhin – Bernanke hat reagiert. Mit zwei dramatischen Schnitten innerhalb von acht Tagen hat die Fed den Leitzins von 4,25 auf 3,0 Prozent gesenkt. Die dramatischste Zinssenkung seit mehr als 25 Jahren hat zumindest auf das Tagesgeschäft fokussierte Börsianer versöhnt. Die Bären, an der Börse Symbol für sinkende Aktienkurse, sind auf der Flucht. "Wir beobachten, dass das Interesse an Aktien bei unseren Kunden gestiegen ist", berichtet Tobias Levkovich, der Starstratege der Citigroup. Kunden würden sich vor allem erkundigen, wie sich die Märkte am Ende einer Rezession verhalten.
Die US-Rezession hat noch nicht richtig begonnen, da scheint es bei vielen Marktteilnehmern schon nur noch darum zu gehen, wie nahe der optimale Punkt für den Einstieg in den nächsten Bullenmarkt liegt.Auch die Investmentbank JP Morgan verbreitet Optimismus: Nach dem starken Kursverfall seien Rezessionsgefahren in den Kursen verarbeitet. Selbst wenn die Gewinne in diesem Jahr um zehn Prozent fallen würden, wären Europas Aktien auf dem durchschnittlichen Niveau der vergangenen Jahre bewertet, so Stratege Mislav Matejka. Die Kalkulation der Bullen: Die Zinssenkung wird die Wirtschaft mit billigem Geld stützen. Das Konjunkturprogramm der Bush-Regierung mit einem Volumen von mehr als 150 Milliarden Dollar soll ein Übriges tun. Die Statistik gibt allen Anlass zum Optimismus, auch mit Blick auf den europäischen Aktienmarkt: Seit 1970 hatte die US-Notenbank zuvor 14 Mal die Zinsen um mindestens 75 Basispunkte gesenkt. Elf Mal entwickelten sich die Kurse europäischer Aktien in den folgenden sechs Monaten positiv. Im Durchschnitt betrug das Plus zehn Prozent. Auf Sicht von zwölf Monaten lag der Index sogar in 100 Prozent der Fälle im grünen Bereich. Der durchschnittliche Gewinn lag bei 20 Prozent.
Doch so simpel muss der Heilungsprozess mittels Zinssenkung nicht zwangsläufig ablaufen. Die Investmentbank Morgan Stanley spricht von einer Bärenmarkt-Rally. Bis zu sechs Monaten könnte eine solche Gegenbewegung dauern und die Kurse bis zu 20 Prozent nach oben treiben. Die Pessimisten verweisen darauf, dass entscheidende Rahmendaten anders zu beurteilen seien als zu Beginn und im Verlauf früherer Abschwünge der US-Konjunktur. Die Schlüsselrolle für das US-Wachstum spiele der private Konsum – und dessen Vitalität sei diesmal nachhaltig geschwächt. Der private Verbrauch macht zwei Drittel des US-Bruttoinlandsprodukts aus. Die Konsumparty der vergangenen fünf Jahre und damit der Löwenanteil des Wachstums der US-Wirtschaft wurde spendiert vom Boom auf dem Immobilienmarkt. Billiges Zentralbankgeld hat-te die Immobilienpreise jahrelang rasant in die Höhe getrieben. Gefühlte Immobilienvermögenszuwächse wurden von den US-Bürgen per Bankkredit in Konsum verwandelt.
Der Housing-Boom ist vorbei. Inzwischen muss der US-Bürger über 14 Prozent seines Einkommens aufbringen, um Kredite abzuzahlen. Viele US-Bürger haben allen Grund, den Gürtel enger zu schnallen – und damit die Konjunktur abzuwürgen. "Wenn wir fünf Prozentpunkte für dieses Jahr herausnehmen, haben wir die Mutter aller Rezessionen", warnt Stephen Roach von Morgan Stanley.
Aber noch etwas ist anders als in frühen Zins- und Konjunkturzyklen: Die Rezession könnte weitgehend eine US-Angelegenheit bleiben. Die Weltwirtschaft könnte sich dank der starken Dynamik der Schwellenländer von einer Krise in den USA abkoppeln. Ganz wird dies nicht gelingen. Aber das weltweite Wachstum wird nach Ansicht des Internationalen Währungsfonds (IWF) stark bleiben. Der IWF reduzierte seine Wachstumsprognose für 2008 für die Weltwirtschaft auf 4,1 Prozent – im Oktober hatte der IWF noch einen Zuwachs von 4,4 Prozent vorausgesagt.
Was bedeutet das Szenario einer US-Rezession oder Stagnation mit schwachen Konsumaussichten und nicht besonders leistungsfähigen Banken vor dem Hintergrund soliden weltwirtschaftlichen Wachstums für die Unternehmensgewinne? Noch drohen negative Überraschungen, nicht nur in den USA. Unicredit sieht für europäische Aktien in diesem Jahr ein Gewinnwachstum von fünf Prozent – der Konsens aber geht noch von zehn Prozent aus. Insbesondere die Industriesektoren würden von deutlichen Gewinnrevisionen geprägt sein. Die niedrigen Bewertungen biete daher noch keine nachhaltige Unterstützung, warnen die Strategen. Angesichts der weit auseinandergehenden Prognosen suchen Börsianer Halt in der Statistik. Der DAX und sein Vorgänger, der FAZ-Index, haben seit 1968 genau 14 größere Abwärtsbewegungen mit einem Kursverlust von mindestens 15 Prozent verkraften müssen. Die längste, als die Kurse nach dem Jahrtausendhoch von 8065 auf 3787 Punkte stürzten, dauerte 18,5 Monate. Die kürzesten Korrekturphasen, in den Jahren 1990 und 1998, dauerten nur zweieinhalb Monate. Die letzte Kursspitze des DAX aus dem Dezember liegt rund siebeneinhalb Wochen zurück.
Viel spricht für turbulente Wochen in nächster Zeit, mit einer "volatilen Bodenbildung", wie sie Unicredit erwartet, oder neuen Jahrestiefständen, wie sie Morgan Stanley als wahrscheinlichere Variante erwartet. Kurserholungen wie in der vergangenen Wochen sollten Anleger demnach nutzen, um die Struktur ihrer Depots zu überprüfen und Risiken zu minimieren. Aktien sollten nicht aus dem Depot verschwinden. Aber es lohnt für die ungewisse Dauer des Bärenmarkts, Titel und Branchen zu prüfen. Klassisch defensive, von der Konjunktur relativ unabhängige Werte bieten derzeit nur begrenzt Sicherheit, da viele dieser Titel schon ambitioniert bewertet sind, wie etwa europäische Versorgern und Nahrungsmittelkonzernen. Stattdessen sollten Anleger Rückschläge bei soliden Werten mit gu- ter Dividendenrendite und überdurchschnittlichen Wachstumsaussichten in Schwellenländern nutzen.
Ein guter Ratgeber sind oft Insider. Vorstände, die Aktien ihrer Unternehmen kaufen, haben sich in der Vergangenheit oft als antizyklische Investoren hervorgetan. In den vergangenen beiden Wochen wurden vor allem die Vorstände von Siemens und BASF durch massive Käufe aktiv. Zumindest diese Bosse glauben also daran, dass Bernanke den Börsenbär schließlich doch bezwingen wird.
Ausblick US-Börsen
Rezessionsangst könnte weiter belasten
Rezessionsängste in den USA dürften die New Yorker Börsen auch in dieser Woche belasten. Verstärken könnten diesen Trend enttäuschende Quartalsbilanzen. Für Optimismus sorgt hingegen das angekündigte Übernahmeangebot von Microsoft für den Internetkonzern Yahoo.
HB NEW YORK. Die Pläne für die knapp 45 Milliarden Dollar schwere Microsoft -Offerte für Yahoo hatten dazu beigetragen, dass der Dow-Jones-Index der Standardwerte am Freitag 0,7 Prozent höher bei 12 743 Punkten schloss. Der breiter gefasste S&P-500 rückte um 1,2 Prozent auf 1395 Zähler vor. Der Index der Technologiebörse Nasdaq erhöhte sich um ein Prozent auf 2413 Punkte. Im Wochenvergleich stieg der Dow Jones um 4,4 Prozent, der S&P-500 um 4,9 Prozent und der Nasdaq -Index um 3,8 Prozent.
Doch gleichzeitig gab die Regierung in Washington bekannt, dass die Wirtschaft im Januar erstmals seit viereinhalb Jahren Stellen abgebaut habe. "Das wichtigste Damoklesschwert über dem Markt ist die Wahrscheinlichkeit, dass wir entweder in einer Rezession sind oder in eine abgleiten", sagte Chef-Börsenstratege Al Goldman von A.G. Edwards. "Mein Gefühl ist, dass der Markt schwächer sein wird, dass wir wieder die Tiefstände der vergangenen Woche antesten und sie schließlich durchbrechen werden."
Hinweise auf die weitere Entwicklung könnten die neuen Geschäftszahlen des Medienunternehmens News Corp am Montag und des Mischkonzerns Tyco sowie von Walt Disney am Dienstag geben. Am Mittwoch ist der Netzwerkausrüster Cisco Systems an der Reihe. Sein Ergebnis lesen Anleger oft als Indikator für die Investitionen der Unternehmen in Technik und damit für den Zustand der Wirtschaft. Die vergangene Quartalsbilanz hatte die Märkte geschockt.
Zudem stehen zahlreiche Konjunkturdaten auf dem Programm: Am Montag veröffentlicht das US-Handelsministerium die Statistik über den Auftragseingang für nicht langlebige Güter. Einen Tag später kommt der Einkaufsmanager-Index Dienstleistungen des Institute for Supply Management. Am Donnerstag gibt es neue Arbeitslosen-Zahlen.
By Andria Cheng, MarketWatch
Last update: 12:00 a.m. EST Feb. 4, 2008
NEW YORK (MarketWatch) -- Forget about gift-card use that pushed holiday sales into January or retailers' appetizing clearance sales.
With consumers worried about their wallets, retailers may be about to report the industry's worst January sales numbers on record.
U.S. chain-store sales in January are expected to be flat and even decline from a year earlier, according to the International Council of Shopping Centers.
'The story of recession seemed to be in every daily newspaper. It just starts to increase the worry level.'
— Michael Niemira, ICSC
By either measure, that would be the worst reading, unadjusted for inflation, since 1969 when ICSC began to compile the data, according to ICSC's chief economist, Michael Niemira said. ICSC already lowered the January forecast twice from an original estimate of a 1.5% gain during the month, Niemira said.
"It's an economic blizzard that seemed to be weakening demand," Niemira said. "The story of recession seemed to be in every daily newspaper. It just starts to increase the worry level. As the uncertainty got worse, the consumers' unwillingness to spend seemed to get worse."
Still, some retailers are expected to fare better than others even as retailers across the board are expected to be impacted by consumers faced with higher gasoline prices and food costs as well as declining housing and mortgage markets, analysts said.
Discounters, wholesale clubs and off-price retailers led each by Wal-Mart Stores Inc., Costco Wholesale Corp. (COST: 66.96, -0.83, -1.2%) and TJX Cos. (TJX:) should outperform as consumers sought bargains, they said. Luxury retailer Saks Inc. is also expected to be a winner in the high-end sector, shielded by its exposure to a more wealthy clientele still buying Chanels and Guccis, analysts predicted.
"Discounters always do the best when there's an economic slowdown," said Jharonne Martis, a retail analyst at Thomson Financial. "Consumers are more price-conscious. It's about savings, savings, savings."
Discounters are expected to post a 2.3% gain, according to the average estimate of analysts surveyed by Thomson Financial. Costco is projected to post a 6.3% gain; TJX a 3.8% increase; and Wal-Mart a 2% rise, analysts projected.
Most retailers report their January sales results on Thursday.
All eyes on economy
Companies in the apparel and department store sector, after a weak holiday season that had left stores with excess coats and other merchandise, are expected to be the weakest performers because of deep discounts offered to clear stock, Martis said.
Gap Inc., the largest U.S. clothing chain, is expected to report a 7.4% decline in same-store sales, after having dropped in 11 of the past 12 months in 2007, Martis said.
The apparel sector, led by Gap will register a 2.3% decline while department store segment sales may drop 3.6%, according to Thomson. Saks is the only player in the segment that's projected for a sales increase, at 3.5%, analysts estimated.
"Moderate department stores are likely to post the weakest results due to the discretionary nature of their assortments and their exposure to the home category, while the high-end is more insulated," Deborah Weinswig, a Citigroup analyst, wrote in a note to clients.
Even as January represents the smallest sales month of the year, retailers' outlook for the year still look less than rosy against the backdrop of economic concerns. The Federal Reserve on Wednesday lowered rates by half a percentage point to 3%, just eight days after cutting rates by three-quarters of a point, to help the economy weather a period of weakness.
Last month, the National Retail Federation, called on Bush and Congressional leaders for swift action that would put money in consumers' pockets after U.S. retailers reported their slowest holiday sales since 2002. Legislation is moving through the House and Senate to implement an economic stimulus quickly.
Retailer revenues this year are expected to rise 3.5%, their slowest advance in six years, according to NRF.
Sales are expected to slow in the first half of the year before picking up in the second half. Luxury and online retailers, which have outperformed in the industry, are also expected to exhibit slowing growth rates, NRF said. Retailers from Home Depot Inc. to AnnTaylor Stores Corp. have announced plans to cut staff to lower costs as they rein in expenses against sluggish sales.
"Everybody is focused on what's going to happen to the economy," said Saks Inc. Chief Executive Steve Sadove in an interview, referring to the most common theme that came up among his retail peers. The chief of the upscale retailer is nevertheless still optimistic about the luxury sector even though Saks also saw some slowdown in the entry-level luxury price point.
Wal-Mart outperforms
Wal-Mart projects January same-store sales to rise 2%. Wal-Mart beat analysts' estimates in both November and December after it lowered prices on more than 15,000 items during the holidays to spur buying.
The company's return to focus on low price especially in the midst of economic uncertainty has paid off, after a failed strategy in 2006 to attract upscale customers, analysts said. Wal-Mart said last week it's cutting prices by up to 30% on thousands of items to lure Super Bowl-related purchases.
Wal-Mart's rival Target Corp. on the other hand, hasn't fared as well. Target said Jan. 21 sales for the month were tracking at the low end of its already reduced forecast range of a 1% decline to 1% increase after it suffered from a decline in traffic.
Target's shoppers, which have higher income than a Wal-Mart shopper, are likely to be hurt more by a downturn in the financial markets that have led to layoffs in that sector, ICSC's Niemira said. Target's higher exposure to more discretionary items such as apparel also made it more vulnerable than Wal-Mart in an economic downturn, analysts said.
"Wal-Mart will continue to benefit from the difficult macro environment, as consumers trade down and consolidate shopping trips," Citigroup's Weinswig said. "Wal-Mart's increased and earlier promotional activity (versus last year) will likely have a positive impact on traffic and sales during the month. (Target's) sales remained challenging in light of the macro environment." End of Story
NEW YORK (dpa-AFX) - Die vom Medienmogul Rupert Murdoch kontrollierte News Corporation hat in ihrem zweiten Geschäftsquartal wegen eines schwächeren Filmgeschäfts den Gewinn kaum steigern können. Bei den Fernsehsendern dagegen verdiente der Konzern auch durch höhere Werbeeinnahmen besser als ein Jahr zuvor.
Der Gewinn erhöhte sich im Ende Dezember abgeschlossenen zweiten Geschäftsquartal leicht um 1,2 Prozent auf 832 Millionen Dollar (561 Mio Euro). Der Umsatz kletterte um 9,5 Prozent auf 8,6 Milliarden Dollar, teilte die News Corp. am Montagabend nach Börsenschluss in New York mit.
Seit kurzem ist ein mit News Corp. verbundenes Unternehmen Großaktionär beim deutschen Abo-Sender Premiere . Damit gelang Murdoch nach mehreren Anläufen der Wiedereinstieg im deutschen Medienmarkt. Im vergangenen Herbst schloss Murdoch zudem die milliardenschwere Übernahme des amerikanischen Dow-Jones-)Konzerns mit dem Flaggschiff "Wall Street Journal" ab./fd/DP/he
By John Letzing, MarketWatch
Last update: 6:39 p.m. EST Feb. 4, 2008
SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) -- Oracle Corp. said it has discovered copyright infringement by rival SAP AG separate from allegations included in a high-profile lawsuit filed last year, according to court documents.
In March, Oracle (ORCL: 20.20, -0.48, -2.3%) sued SAP and its Texas-based subsidiary TomorrowNow Inc. in U.S. District Court in San Francisco, alleging copyright infringement and "corporate theft on a grand scale." Oracle said that TomorrowNow had improperly used customer passwords to access its customer service Web site, and download large amounts of proprietary information.
But in a filing in the past week, Oracle claims that it "has uncovered a broader program of copyright infringement that is entirely different from the scheme alleged in the current complaint."
Oracle says it is considering filing an amended complaint to include the new claims, and "expects soon to share a draft amended complaint with defendants." Oracle also asks to extend discovery phase of the proceeding, based on recent developments.
An Oracle spokeswoman declined to comment.
Maintaining software for large customers is a lucrative business; services constituted some $1.2 billion of Oracle's $5.3 billion in total revenue for its quarter ended in November. Oracle has argued that SAP (SAP: 47.90, -0.25, -0.5%) was using TomorrowNow to sabotage its services business, because it couldn't compete fairly using its own resources.
SAP in July acknowledged that TomorrowNow employees made "inappropriate downloads" from the customer service site, and disclosed that the U.S. Justice Department was looking into the matter. SAP in November announced that senior managers at TomorrowNow were stepping down, and that SAP was considering selling the troubled unit.
A spokesman for SAP did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
In court filings, SAP says that Oracle "has not provided the barest description of its supposed new claims," and argues against extending the discovery period.
Oracle says in the filing that "TomorrowNow developers infringed on Oracle's intellectual property on a daily basis over the course of many years, in ways that Oracle is only beginning to discover."
While SAP has sought to distance itself from TomorrowNow's activities, Oracle says that, "discovery received to date shows that SAP AG and SAP America were substantially involved in TomorrowNow's downloading and other activities," adding that it has identified "more than five SAP AG and SAP America personnel whose depositions it will need to take."
In addition to citing new discoveries, Oracle says SAP has not produced documents it has requested, including those related to the Justice Department investigation.
"Defendants have withheld relevant documents from Oracle that they have already supplied to the government," Oracle says in the filing.
Microsoft bid for Yahoo comes after lackluster results by Web search giant
By John Letzing, MarketWatch
Last update: 7:02 p.m. EST Feb. 4, 2008
SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) -- Microsoft Corp. may have done arch-rival Google Inc. a small favor last week by announcing its massive $44.6 billion bid for Yahoo Inc. on Friday -- thereby deflecting some attention from Google's disappointing earnings report for the fourth quarter.
Still, investors seem to have gotten the message anyway. Google's (GOOG: 495.43, -20.47, -4.0%) once high-flying stock has slipped 12% in the two trading sessions since the report. The shares closed Monday below the $500 mark for the first time in nearly six months.
The results from Google highlighted weakness in its flagship online advertising business, though the Web search giant still holds a commanding market share. See related story.
Earnings for the quarter rose 17%, but fell short of Wall Street's expectations.
Most troubling for many analysts was the fact that growth in paid-click volume -- the number of times that Google users actually clicked on an ad -- fell to 30% for the quarter compared to a growth rate of 45% for the previous period.
"Although revenue growth of 52% year on year for a company of this size is highly impressive, we think that the first cracks may be starting to appear in Google's hyper-growth story," Jeff Lindsay of Sanford Bernstein wrote in a note to clients on Friday.
The lackluster quarterly report may have even helped compel Google to insert itself into the buyout battle, by saying publicly Sunday that competition in the Internet market may suffer after a combination of Microsoft with Yahoo.
Wall Street scales back expectations
Wall Street has stayed largely bullish on Google, but many analysts have scaled back their expectations for the stock, which neared the $750 mark just three months ago. The median price target for Google shares slid from $780 to $695, according to data from Thomson Financial. Current targets range from $600 to $900.
"Given the rising guaranteed payments to MySpace, Ask and others and the absence of operating leverage, we believe that the risk profile of Google has increased and recommend that investors step to the sidelines," said Jefferies analyst Youssef Squali, who downgraded Google to a hold from buy and slashed his price target from $725 to $600.
In a note to clients Sunday, Goldman Sachs analysts removed Google from the firm's "technology framework favorite growth list." The analysts noted that Google shares have fallen more than 14% since it was added to the list last month.
During its conference call with analysts following last week's report, Google's management highlighted some difficulties during the quarter; one in particular involved deriving revenue from advertisements in places Internet users are flocking to, such as social networking sites.
In addition, Google said some changes in its search algorithm hindered revenue growth.
Meanwhile the newly proposed Microsoft (MSFT: 30.19, -0.26, -0.8%) and Yahoo (YHOO: 29.33, +0.95, +3.4%) merger promises a significant competitor to Google just as the market is turning toward the relatively new territory of graphical display advertising.
Microsoft-Yahoo could have advantages
Bear Stearns analyst Robert Peck wrote in a note to clients that in terms of display advertising, "both Yahoo and Microsoft have a stronger edge than Google, which currently does little business in display."
Google has made significant moves to bolster its presence in display advertising, most notably agreeing last year to buy display advertising specialist DoubleClick for $3.1 billion.
But that acquisition has yet to be approved by European antitrust regulators. "The display business is literally right in front of us," Google Chief Executive Eric Schmidt said Thursday.
In a note to clients, Thomas Weisel analyst Christa Quarles called Microsoft and Yahoo the "#1 and #2 display ad franchises," adding that because of the combination "Google could be tempted to move more aggressively to improve its display ad positioning."
In addition to closing its purchase of DoubleClick, Quarles wrote, Google could address the display advertising market more aggressively by expanding its relationship with AOL (TWX: 15.84, -0.23, -1.4%) , which runs an extensive network for display advertising.
Another concern, Bear Stearns' Peck wrote, is that a combined Microsoft and Yahoo would automatically create a top rival to Google in overall Internet page views.
The merger would let Microsoft and Yahoo together "command 11% in [U.S.] page views market share, more than double Google's 5% market share," Peck wrote. That compares to an international market share of 8% for Microsoft and Yahoo, below the 9% held by Google.
In addition, Peck wrote, the Microsoft and Yahoo merger would cut into one of Google's most prized privileges -- its ability to use the significant cash generated by its search business to dabble in numerous other potential growth areas, such as mobile phones and office software applications such as spreadsheets.
"With a stronger combined competitor, Google will most certainly have to be more aggressive with operating expenses and capital expenditures to ward off the combined threat," Peck wrote.
Commentary: Insiders are betting heavily on bull-market rebound
By Mark Hulbert, MarketWatch
Last update: 12:01 a.m. EST Feb. 5, 2008
ANNANDALE, Va. (MarketWatch) -- It's been a month since I checked on what corporate insiders are doing.
It turns out that they are even more bullish now. Which is saying something, since they were already very bullish a month ago. See Jan. 8 column
Corporate insiders, of course, are a company's officers, directors, and largest shareholders. Whenever they buy or sell any of their company's shares, they are required to report those transactions more or less immediately to the Securities and Exchange Commission. Many pay close attention to what the insiders are buying and selling, since there is a significant body of research showing that insiders are usually more right than the rest of us.
One firm that analyzes the insider data is Argus Research, which publishes the results of its analysis in a newsletter called the Vickers Weekly Insider Report. Vickers found that, in the week in the past month in which the Dow Jones Industrial Average ($INDU: 12,357.23, -277.93, -2.2%) hit its correction low of 11,971.19, insiders actually bought more of their companies' shares than they sold. That is a rare, and potentially very bullish, phenomenon, since insiders given the number of shares they are given by their companies as compensation, as outright grants or through options almost always sell more than they buy.
To be sure, the week-to-week numbers are volatile. For that reason, Vickers also calculates an eight-week moving average that is the ratio of all insider sales over the trailing 8 weeks to all insider purchases. For the eight weeks ending Friday, this sell-to-buy ratio stood at 1.39-to-1. Vickers considers any ratio below 2-1 to be bullish. The last time that it was actually this low was in November 2002, just after the 2000-2002 bear market hit bottom.
Skeptics will quite rightly point out that insiders are not perfect. Despite their bullishness in early January, for example, the Dow proceeded to fall some 900 points in the 10 trading sessions following my month-ago column.
But it would be a mistake to expect the composite insider data to have short-term market timing significance. Because of strict insider trading laws and regulations that prevent insiders from buying immediately before their companies announce good news, and from selling immediately prior to bad news, insiders wanting to exploit their inside knowledge must act many months in advance.
So the stock market's January correction is not a valid reason to dismiss the insight we can gain by following the lead of corporate insiders.
I submit that the proper way of interpreting the insiders' bullishness in recent weeks and months is that there is a good probability that the stock market will be significantly higher in one year's time.
Walt Disney Co. profit declines 27% on year-ago gain
By David B. Wilkerson
Last update: 4:19 p.m. EST Feb. 5, 2008
CHICAGO (MarketWatch) - Walt Disney Co. (DIS: 30.07, -0.83, -2.7%) said Tuesday that its fiscal first-quarter profit fell 27% compared with a prior year that included a gain from sales of its interests in E! Entertainment and Us Weekly, as well as results from its discontinued ABC radio operations. The Burbank, Calif.-based company said it earned $1.25 billion, or 63 cents a share, compared with a profit of $1.70 billion, or 79 cents a share, in the same quarter a year earlier. Excluding the gains and ABC Radio income, Disney would have earned 49 cents a share in the fiscal first quarter of 2007. Revenue rose 9% to $10.45 billion on improved results at Disney's television networks, theme parks and consumer products division. Disney was expected to earn 52 cents a share on $10 billion in revenue, according to a survey of analysts by Thomson Financial.
By Carla Mozee, MarketWatch
Last update: 5:35 p.m. EST Feb. 5, 2008
SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) -- Shares of Walt Disney Co. and JDSU Corp. surged during Tuesday's late-trading session after the media giant and the networking-equipment provider posted results that were better than Wall Street had expected.
Disney shares were up 4.8% at $31.50. The company said its fiscal first-quarter profit fell 27% to $1.25 billion, or 63 cents a share, compared with last year's $1.70 billion, or 79 cents a share, which included a gain from sales of its interests in E! Entertainment and Us Weekly, as well as results from its discontinued ABC radio operations.
Revenue rose 9% to $10.45 billion on improved results at Disney's television networks, theme parks and consumer products division. Disney was expected to earn 52 cents a share on $10 billion in revenue, according to a survey of analysts by Thomson Financial
JDSU shares shot up 18% to $12 following the company's report that fiscal second-quarter net earnings were $21.2 million, or 9 cents a share, from $23.2 million, or 10 cents a share, a year earlier. Excluding items, earnings would have been 22 cents a share. Revenue increased 9% to $399.2 million. Analysts were looking for earnings of 12 cents a share on revenue of $386.4 million.
For the third quarter, JDSU forecast pro forma revenue of $380 million to $402 million. Wall Street is looking for revenue of $390.2 million. End of Story
Bank ratings may be cut on bond insurer woes: S&P By Alistair Barr, MarketWatch Last update: 5:16 p.m. EST Feb. 5, 2008 SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) -- Standard & Poor's said on Tuesday that it may downgrade bank ratings because of trouble in the $2.4 trillion bond insurance business. "Bond insurers are suffering as a result of their roles as guarantors of mortgage-related securities, and downgrading them could affect all markets in which they are active, including the municipal bond, commercial mortgage-backed securities, and other structured finance areas," Tanya Azarchs, a credit analyst for S&P, wrote in a note to investors. "In turn, dislocation in those markets could affect banks." Bond insurers guarantee billons of dollars worth of complex securities known as collateralized debt obligations (CDOs). But losses on these securities have begun to rise, imperiling the companies' crucial AAA ratings. Banks and securities firms lost close to $146 billion from subprime-related products in 2007. S&P estimated that bond insurers have guaranteed at least $125 billion of the principle and interest payments of subprime-related CDOs. "We believe that the specific, identifiable effect on banks may be significant and, in a few cases, could lead to downgrades. Large global institutions have direct exposure to the bond insurers in a number of ways," Azarchs said. 'We believe that the specific, identifiable effect on banks may be significant and, in a few cases, could lead to downgrades. Large global institutions have direct exposure to the bond insurers in a number of ways.' — Tanya Azarchs, S&P If there are big downgrades, banks that have hedged CDO positions with guarantees from bond insurers may suffer more write-downs. The ratings agency pointed to several banks that have recently increased loan loss reserves and could have existing CDO risk, including Merrill Lynch, Citibank and CIBC. S&P has downgraded Financial Guaranty Insurance Co. to AA from AAA and slashed the rating of ACA Capital's bond insurer unit to CCC. The agency has also warned it may cut the AAA ratings of MBIA Inc. , Ambac Financial Group Inc. and Security Capital . There are, however, several moves afoot to bail out other struggling bond insurers Financial Guaranty Insurance Co., partially owned by Blackstone Group and PMI Group and Ambac Financial Group Inc. Both plans would focus on shoring up capital for the insurers in the hopes of dodging further downgrades. Regulators such as New York Insurance Commissioner Eric Dinallo had been trying for weeks to cajole banks into helping faltering insurers. That pleading has apparently worked, for now: Barclays PLC, Citigroup Inc. and Societe Generale are backing the move to help FGIC. Similarly, Royal Bank of Scotland Group PLC, BNP Paribas, Dresdner Bank, Wachovia Corp., Barclays, Greenhill & Co. and UBS are throwing support behind Ambac. Regardless of any bail out, downgrades will likely continue as the market tries to digest the extent of its subprime mortgage-related contagion. Fellow ratings agency Fitch Ratings said today that it may downgrade the more than $220 billion of CDOs that it currently assesses by as much as five levels. Fitch created new risk-defining protocols after determining it did not accurately assess dangers associated with these types of assets. It lowered ratings in November on more than $67 billion of mortgage-linked CDOs, effectively naming many of them junk. The formerly hot CDO market has since slowed down to a trickle, with only one created in the U.S. in 2008.
Mild recession can't be ruled out: Fed official
Richmond Fed's Lacker first to say publicly it's a possibility
By Greg Robb, MarketWatch
Last update: 2:36 p.m. EST Feb. 5, 2008
WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) -- After months of treating the word like a hot potato, a senior Federal Reserve policymaker said publicly what economists have been saying for months: A recession may be on the U.S. economic horizon.
Jeffrey Lacker, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond, Va., took the plunge in a speech to a business group in West Virginia on Tuesday.
He may really have only backed into this distinction, however, because Lacker's the first Fed official to speak publicly since the U.S. central bank put the pedal to the metal and slashed short-term interest rates -- by fully 1.25 percentage points -- in a span of eight days during the latter half of January.
With a spate of other Fed officials scheduled to be out speaking in coming days, it will be interesting to see if they follow Lacker's lead.
Lacker stressed that a recession was not his central forecast. Instead, he projected "sluggish growth for at least half a year before a gradual firming begins."
However, "I can also see the possibility of a mild recession, similar to the last two we have experienced -- in other words, shallow and with a slow recovery," Lacker said.
"What I don't expect is a more severe recession, like those we saw in 1982 or 1974," Lacker said.
In 1974, the nation's economy fell at a 3.4% annual rate in the first quarter and then at 1.6% in the third quarter and 4.7% in the fourth quarter.
In 1981 and 1982, the economy contracted at a 3.1% rate followed by a 4.9% rate and 6.4% rate over a four-quarter period.
If job growth is positive in months ahead and if income growth can stay ahead of inflation, the economy may be able to skirt the boundary of recession, he said.
Impeccable inflation-fighting credentials
Lacker is a well-known inflation hawk on the policy-setting Federal Open Market Committee, having called for more Fed interest-rate hikes in the fall of 2006 than the committee consensus was prepared to engineer.
So it's not too much of a surprise that Lacker said he remains troubled over the outlook for prices.
"I have to say that I am uncomfortable with the inflation picture and disappointed that the improvement we saw earlier this year was not more lasting," Lacker said.
As a result, Lacker doubts wheter more rate cuts would be necessary unless the outlook darkens in coming months, saying: "If incoming data are not weaker than expected over the next several months, it's not clear further rate cuts would be warranted."
"The longer we go experiencing only upside inflation misses ... the more we risk losing the credibility we have fought so hard to maintain," Lacker said.
U.S. stocks attempt recovery from Tuesday's hit
By Kate Gibson, MarketWatch
Last update: 10:38 a.m. EST Feb. 6, 2008
NEW YORK (MarketWatch) -- U.S. stocks edged higher Wednesday, with the market trying to bounce back from its largest single-day plunge in nearly a year, after the government said productivity grew more than expected and as blue chip Walt Disney Co.'s earnings surpassed estimates.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average ($INDU: 12,329.92, +64.79, +0.5%) rose 38.8 points to 12,303.7, with 18 of its 30 components trading higher.
Leading the Dow's advancers were shares of Disney (DIS:) up 5.7%. Late Tuesday, the media and entertainment giant reported a first-quarter profit that fell 27% from the year-ago period, results that topped expectations. See full story.
The Dow's decliners included General Motors Corp. recently off 2.1%, after its downgrade to underperform by Bear Stearns, which also lowered its rating on Ford Motor Co. to peer perform, citing worries over consumers' ability to buy cars and trucks. Ford's shares also traded lower.
The S&P 500 gained 5.52 points to 1,342.16 and the Nasdaq Composite climbed 10 points to 2,319.57.
Volume on the New York Stock Exchange hit 254 million as advancing stocks outpaced declining issues 9 to 5. On the Nasdaq, 402 million shares changed hands, with advancers topping decliners 3 to 2.
Earlier, the Labor Department estimated productivity growth in the nonfarm business sector slowed to a 1.8% annual rate in the fourth quarter from 6% in the third.
"This data suggest that, in the near term, falling productivity should not be a source of inflation concern for the Fed," said Drew Matus, economist at Lehman Brothers.
Stocks plunged on Tuesday, with the Dow industrials tumbling to their biggest drop in 11 months, after a key service-sector gauge contracted in January, another signal that a U.S. recession may be at hand.
In early action on the New York Mercantile Exchange, gold futures rose sharply to trade back above $900 an ounce, with gold for April delivery recently up $20.2 at $910.5 an ounce. Read Metals Stocks.
And in the energy pits, crude-oil futures held steady near $88 a barrel, with crude for March delivery off 6 cents at $88.35 a barrel.
Housing's unending toll
Toll Brothers Inc. drew scrutiny, saying it doesn't see an end to the U.S. housing market's woes. The luxury homebuilder reported home-construction revenue fell 22% in the first quarter. Its stock fell 2.6%. Read more.
"Based on current traffic and deposits, we are not yet seeing much light at the end of the tunnel," said Robert Toll, chairman and chief executive.
Meanwhile, the Mortgage Bankers Association earlier reported applications for mortgages rose a seasonally adjusted 3% last week compared to the previous week. See full story.
And on Tuesday, Richmond Federal Bank chief Jeffrey Lacker became the first Federal Reserve official to say publicly that the nation's economy is at risk of recession.
Lacker is due to make another speech Wednesday, as are Fed Governor Randall Kroszner and Philly Fed President Charles Plosser. Fed chief Ben Bernanke is due to hold a private meeting with Senate Banking Committee Chairman Chris Dodd, D.-Conn.
Besides Disney, other financial results included a drop in fourth-quarter net income for media and entertainment mainstay Time Warner Inc. shares of which gained 3.1%.
Overseas, concerns about the U.S. economy fueled heavy losses in Asia. Read Asia Markets.
In Europe, however, stocks battled back into the black.
By Moming Zhou
Last update: 10:36 a.m. EST Feb. 6, 2008
SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) - U.S. crude inventories rose by 7 million barrels to 300 million barrels in the week ending Feb. 1, U.S. Energy Information Administration reported on Wednesday. After the data, crude-oil futures for March delivery fell $1.03, or 1.2%, to $87.38 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Gasoline supplies rose by 3.6 million barrels in the latest week, while distillate stocks grew by 100,000 barrels, EIA reported. Analysts surveyed by Platts expected that crude supplies rose by 2.6 million barrels, gasoline inventories rose by 2 million barrels, while distillate stocks dropped by 2.6 million barrels.