Friday, February 12, 2010

China's Rate Increase Causes Bulls' Trot to Cease

After posting nice gains yesterday amid some clarity regarding the Eurozone's support for Greece, stocks are giving back those gains in late-morning action amid resurfacing economic recovery uncertainty following a surprise rate hike out of China. The global economic uneasiness is teaming up with an unexpected drop in consumer sentiment to overshadow a larger-than expected increase in retail sales for January and Treasuries are higher amid some flight-to-safety buying. In other economic news, business inventories unexpectedly declined. On the equity front, Agilent Technologies topped the Street's profit expectations, while Ingersoll-Rand missed analysts' earnings forecasts. Outside of earnings, Motorola announced that it will split into two separate publically traded companies. Overseas, Asia was higher before China's announcement, and Europe has given up early gains and is lower following the news out of China.

China's Surprising Reserve Rate Rise, Points to Bulls' Demise

After getting some clarity on whether Eurozone leaders will provide support to help the deficit problems in Greece, stocks are under pressure in morning action following a surprise rate hike out of China, which is dampening optimism about the global economic recovery. The uneasiness following China's actions is overshadowing a larger-than-expected rise in US retail sales in January. Treasuries are higher as the equity markets slide, and ahead of reports on consumer sentiment and business inventories. In equity news, Agilent Technologies topped the Street's profit expectations, while Ingersoll-Rand missed analysts' earnings forecasts. Overseas, Asia was higher before China's announcement, and Europe has pared early gains following the news out of China.