Wall Street: Wednesday close

13 April 2012

A STRONGER-than-expected report on housing construction soothed Wall Street and gave investors an incentive to pick up some bargains after four days of falls. A bullish outlook from

General Electric

'You had the record housing numbers, which were encouraging,' said John Caldwell, chief equity strategist for McDonald Financial Group. 'After several days of declines you have some buyers stepping in.

'The market is a little bit extended, so we're not looking for major moves in either direction,' he added. 'This market can hopefully tread water through the end of the year.'

The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed up 66.30, or 0.7%, at 9690.46, after a four-day loss of nearly 225 points.

The broader market also finished higher. The Nasdaq composite index gained 17.90, or 1%, to 1899.65. The Standard & Poor's 500 index rose 8.29, or 0.8%, to 1042.44.

General Electric rose $1.03 to $29.47 after the company said it will probably increase its quarterly dividend by a penny to 20 cents a share next year, citing in part optimism about an improving economy.

The Commerce Department reported that housing construction rose in October to 1.96m units at a seasonally adjusted annual rate, representing a 2.9% increase from September. It was the highest level of activity in 17 years and beat analysts' estimates.

Stocks have ratcheted up and down in recent weeks as investors, having sent the market higher since mid-March, wonder if prices might be a bit high. Analysts say the market might not have the strength to advance significantly in the absence of surprisingly good economic news.

'When you look at valuations, it's one of the concerning factors that can limit gains over the course of 2004,' Caldwell said.

Michael Palazzi, managing director of equity trading at SG Cowen Securities, agreed. 'We've seen the market consolidate over the last four trading days. The market has been very defensive,' he said. 'What kicked it out of the trend was one, a slightly oversold condition, and two, the announcement by General Electric saying the economy will pick up. It's definitely a market leader.'

SoundView Technology Group gained $2.16 to $15.41 after Charles Schwab said it would acquire the research and investment banking firm in a deal worth about $324m in cash. Schwab fell 8 cents to $11.34.

Analog Devices climbed $1.70 to $46.59 after the chipmaker said quarterly profit more than doubled and beat Wall Street's forecasts.

Rising issues outnumbered falling stocks 8 to 5 on the New York Stock Exchange. Volume was moderate. The Russell 2000 index, a barometer of smaller company stocks, rose 3.94, or 0.8%, to 525.62.

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