Thursday, June 25, 2009

Treasury Auctions Pass The Test

I told you last week that it would be an interesting test of the bond market with the Treasury auctioning off $104 billion in bonds this week. It seems like the bond market passed the test or did it? Firstly the longest maturity was 7 years, I would be interested to see the appetite for 10 year or 30 year bonds. Another question is how much did the Fed buy and how much did foreigners buy. Too bad the States can't print money and purchase their own debt, see post below. Stock market halted four days of losses with a strong 172 point gain in the Dow-Lou


NEW YORK (Reuters) - Stocks rose sharply on Thursday, helped by consumer discretionary shares after Bed Bath & Beyond Inc (NasdaqGS:BBBY - News) posted a surprising profit increase and home builder Lennar Corp (LEN - News) reported a rise in new home sales.

Lennar posted a wider quarterly loss, but noted an increase in new sales and orders. Its stock shot up 16.5 percent to $9.11.

The Dow Jones U.S. home construction index (DJI:^DJUSHB -News) jumped 5.7 percent.

Gains in home builders and retailers point to signs of strength in consumer spending, which could be a boon for stocks just as the second-quarter earnings reporting period gets under way.

"To us, this is a market that wants to move higher. I think the market's recovering from that 6 percent decline" from recent highs, said Tim Ghriskey, chief investment officer of Solaris Asset Management in Bedford Hills, New York.

The Dow Jones industrial average (DJI:^DJI - News) was up 149.86 points, or 1.81 percent, at 8,449.72. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index (^SPX - News) was up 16.53 points, or 1.83 percent, at 917.47. The Nasdaq Composite Index (^IXIC - News) was up 30.93 points, or 1.73 percent, at 1,823.27.

Earlier, all three indexes gained as much as 2 percent to 2.29 percent to hit session highs.

Another sign that encouraged investors was news the Federal Reserve was extending a number of emergency funding facilities while scaling back some others.

"What we saw is an improvement here in that one program went away, but also the flexibility that these other ones are staying around in case they're needed," said Bucky Hellwig, senior vice president at Morgan Asset Management, in Birmingham, Alabama.

An auction of $27 billion of 7-year notes attracted strong demand, pressuring U.S. Treasury bond yields. The auction completed this week's sales of Treasury coupons, with all three auctions seeing solid demand.

In the retail sector, Bed Bath & Beyond reported a surprising increase in quarterly profit as it cut costs to offset slumping demand, and its stock gained 10.2 percent to $31.29. The retail index (^RLX - News) climbed 3.8 percent.

There was also some relief in the market that Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke had weathered a tough grilling in Congress relatively well.


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