Fed Says Job Losses Abating, Leaves Rates Unchanged
By Robert Perrego, at 4:48 pm on December 16th, 2009Well the good news is job losses are slowing down but the bad news is we are still losing jobs. In the last meeting for 2009, the Federal Open Market Committee voted to keep interest rates “exceptionally low” for “an extended period of time” while noting that they are seeing some improvement in household spending. This meetings statement was very similar to the past few except some comments were made on slowly improving areas of the economy such as household spending and decreasing job losses. These statements strengthened the dollar with the US Dollar Index Future spot price trading up on the announcement. You do not hear ‘The Fed’ without hearing ‘exit strategy’ these days and as it is widely thought that raising interest rates with 10% unemployment would not be greeted favorably by the Obama Administration, the first step towards the ‘exit’ would be to stop their quantitative easing programs. So, The Fed also stated they will continue to purchase agency mortgage-backed securities through February 1, 2010 but after that ‘the store is closed.’
After The Fed announcement at 2:15 p.m., the Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped about 30 points net into the close to finish down 10.88 points (-0.10%, 10,441.12) while the S&P 500 dropped about 5 points on the announcement and finished up 1.25 points (+0.11%, 1109.18). The Nasdaq 100 rose 2.61 points (+0.14%, 1,800.82).
The dollar traded up on the announcement and basically closed unchanged on the day. Earlier in the day the usual relationships were acting as expected with the dollar down and stocks and commodities up. Interestingly, the dollar rallied into the end of the day and erased its losses while gold and oil also closed near their highs on the day. New York Spot Gold added $13.60 an ounce (+1.21%, $1,136.60, 4:14 p.m.) and the SPDR Gold Shares (NYSE: GLD) bounced off support and broke higher by $1.36 (+1.25%, $111.59). The GLD’s chart looks very nice for more upside movement as the latest gold pullback may have seen its lows. Paulson, Einhorn and most every other gold bull was saying they would be buying on dips and I wonder just how much they were able to add to their positions over the past 3 or 4 days.
Nymex crude added $2.03 a barrel (+2.87%, $72.72, 4:09 p.m.) as it seems the pullback in oil may be over with too. We were below $70 a barrel on Monday but a nice run over the last two days has changed all that. Copper, steel, coal and agricultural commodities were all up as well.
Another federal agency was in the news today as the Federal Trade Commission filed a lawsuit against Intel Corp. (NSDQ: INTC) for anti-competitive behavior. I think the legal community founded Intel and they didn’t do it for semiconductor chips as this company generates lawsuits about every other day. The lawsuit cites bundling practices and even a secretly redesigned compiler software that makes their competitors chips run a little slower. Intel finished lower by 42 cents (-2.12%, $19.38).
Nvidia Corp. (NSDQ: NVDA) jumped higher as they are one of the firms that Intel is supposedly squeezing out of the chip market as the graphics chip company added $1.26 (+8.05%, $16.91).
Housing companies were strong today as Housing Starts were up 46k over last month and Permits were up 32k. Beezer Homes USA Inc. (NYSE: BZH) gained 13.36% (+$0.60, $5.09), Pulte Homes Inc. (NYSE: PHM) gained 5.06% (+$0.45, $9.34), D. R. Horton (NYSE: DHI) gained 4.89% (+$0.48, $10.29) and Lennar Corp. (NYSE: LEN) was up 4.73% (+$0.57, $12.62).
The big economic news of the week was the FOMC meeting and with that out of the way we have Jobless Claims tomorrow at 8:30 a.m. with the expectations being 465k with a range from 460 to 470. Friday is a quaruple witching day in the options market.
Tiger Woods name was only mentioned 232,000 times on CNBC today as something really important to all of our lives probably did not happen or have anything at all to do with Tiger Woods but CNBC was there to cover it.




