Market Recap: DJIA Battles Back from 110-Point Drop, but Bears Win the Day

A see-saw session ended with modest losses for the major market indexes

by Elizabeth Harrow (eharrow@sir-inc.com) 7/29/2010 4:19 PM



It was a roller-coaster day for the equities market, as traders considered a fresh onslaught of corporate earnings, economic data, and Fedspeak. Exxon Mobil (XOM) and Colgate-Palmolive (CL) sparked early anxiety by falling short of Wall Street's second-quarter revenue expectations, but the Labor Department helped offset some of those concerns with its weekly report on jobless claims. The number of first-time filers for unemployment benefits dropped by 11,000 last week, marking a steeper-than-anticipated decline. However, St. Louis Fed President James Bullard spooked investors by warning of potential "Japan-style" deflation if interest rates remain perpetually low. Not to be outdone, Dallas Fed head Richard Fisher warned of a "slow slog... out of a hellish downturn" for the U.S. economy, and added that "further monetary accommodation" would be tantamount to "pushing on a string."

"It was a wild day, but in the end the bears made it two in a row," said Senior Technical Strategist Ryan Detrick. Amid a mixed bag of earnings and economic news, he explained, "technicals ruled, as the S&P 500 Index (SPX) peaked near its 200-day moving average."

CLOSING SUMMARY – INDICES

CLOSING SUMMARY – NYSE AND NASDAQ

The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA – 10,467.16) rebounded from a 110-point intraday deficit to settle on a more modest decline of 30.7 points, or 0.3%. Nineteen of the 30 blue chips ended lower, led by Kraft Foods (KFT), while Merck & Co. (MRK) set the pace for the 10 advancing equities. Johnson & Johnson (JNJ) split the difference by finishing flat. Tomorrow, the Dow will do battle with its 20-week moving average, which hasn't been surmounted on a weekly closing basis since mid-May.

The S&P 500 Index (SPX – 1,101.53) also clawed back from its session lows, managing a photo finish above the round-number 1,100 level. The SPX shed just 4.6 points, or 0.4% -- but, as Detrick noted, the SPX is still battling pressure from its 200-day moving average. Finally, the Nasdaq Composite (COMP – 2,251.69) whittled its daily deficit to just 12.9 points, or 0.6%, by the close. Nevertheless, the COMP snapped a four-day winning streak above its own 200-day trendline.

Turning to equities in focus, Visa Inc. (V) was pummeled by post-earnings price-target cuts ... Genworth Financial (GNW) was the target of a long strangle ahead of its quarterly report ... Call volume ramped up on Research In Motion Limited (RIMM) in advance of the revamped BlackBerry's launch ... Bears flocked to Kellogg Co. (K) after the cereal sultan slashed its earnings guidance ... A neutral-to-bullish bettor singled out Kroger Co. (KR) for a put-sell strategy ... and today's Quote of the Day comes from President Obama, who stopped by the set of The View to discuss hot-button issues such as the economy, Shirley Sherrod, and -- of course -- pop culture trivia. When co-host Joy Behar asked the commander in chief whether he thought Mel Gibson should seek anger management, Obama seemed more than eager to dodge the question -- after a few moments of stammering, he pleaded:

"Let me answer the Afghanistan question."

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

And, in case you missed it, Joseph Hargett considered the implications of bearish speculation on Ventas Inc. (VTR) in today'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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