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Wall St Wk Ahead
Published in Saudi Press Agency on 01 - 02 - 2009


Investors are hoping swift
action on an economic stimulus plan will boost Wall Street this
week after its worst January ever, according to Reuters.
The stream of bleak news reached fever pitch after U.S.
companies shed more than 200,000 jobs in January and some
investors worried a plan to shore up banks may take longer to
come together.
The nation's recovery hopes have been placed squarely on
the shoulders of lawmakers in Washington, where the U.S.
Senate will begin a closely watched debate this week on the
$887 billion economic stimulus bill, after the House of
Representatives passed its version without a single Republican
vote.
"If they come up with a plan -- any kind of plan -- the
market will rally a little bit (this) week," said Warren
Simpson, managing director at Stephens Capital Management in
Little Rock, Arkansas.
But Simpson cautioned that without a plan, stocks could
retest the November bear market lows. Indeed, David Kostin,
Goldman Sachs chief U.S. equity strategist, said in a research
note that the S&P 500 could challenge this low during the
first quarter of 2009.
"Everybody's nervous here," Simpson said.
JANUARY JOBLESS RATE MAY SOAR
After a cascade of job cuts last week, investors are
bracing for the government's January employment report
expected Friday and the ADP employment data due Wednesday.
Forecasts for the January unemployment rate hover around
7.5 percent, according to ThomsonReuters estimates. That would
be the highest monthly jobless rate since September 1992 and
an increase from December's 7.2 percent, Economists expect
that U.S. non-farm payrolls shrank by 524,000 in January.
Adding to the grim economic backdrop will be same-store
sales expected from a slew of retailers on Thursday. Quarterly
results from companies, including drug maker Merck & Co,
mobile-phone maker Motorola Inc, and No. 1 U.S. home builder
D.R. Horton, could confirm this snapshot.
"Everyone knows the numbers are going to be bad, but what
we need to see is the direction policies are taking," said
Eric Kuby, chief investment officer at North Star Investment
Management Corp in Chicago.
"Washington can change the tone of the market."
BANKS ON CENTER STAGE
A broad rally among financials helped stocks early last
week, but the surge was derailed on Thursday after data showed
jobless claims scaled to a new high, while new home sales slid
to a record low.
For the week, the Dow fell almost 1 percent, the S&P 500
declined 0.7 percent and the Nasdaq dipped 0.1 percent.
But the Dow and S&P 500 recorded their worst January slide
in history. January performance is typically a harbinger for
stocks for the rest of the year.
Financials will be a critical group this week as investors
nervously await any news on President Barack Obama's alternate
plans to prop up banks' balance sheets and the ongoing drama
surrounding the economic recovery legislation.
"The fiscal stimulus package buys us time until the
banking system is recapitalized," said David Joy, chief market
strategist at RiverSource Investments.
Any delays in passing the package "would be a very big
setback for the stock market, no question," Joy said.
Defaults on subprime mortgages led to losses on
mortgage-related debt in the summer of 2007, triggering the
credit crunch and wreaking havoc in the banking sector that
led to the meltdown on Wall Street last year. The banking
turmoil and the recession, which began in late 2007, have
resulted in a sharp slowdown in bank lending and consumer
spending, and a rising tide of job losses. The president hopes
his stimulus package will mitigate the damage by helping the
economy begin to turn around.
MONTHLY RETAIL SALES LOOK ANEMIC
On Thursday, a slew of retailers will post same-store
sales figures, which are expected to contract 2.4 percent in
January. Excluding discount retailer Wal-Mart Stores Inc, sales
could shrink 5.7 percent.
Investors will pay close attention to these numbers
because consumer spending makes up two-thirds of the U.S.
gross domestic product, which shrank 3.8 percent in the fourth
quarter -- the fastest pace in nearly 27 years.
The U.S. housing sector -- the root of the economic crisis
-- will also be a focal point this week, although quarterly
results from top U.S. home builders, D.R. Horton and Pulte
Homes Inc, and Tuesday's data on pending home sales may not
yield many positives.
The week will kick off with a look at personal income and
consumption, or spending, for December, plus the Institute for
Supply Management's January index of U.S. manufacturing
activity, both due on Monday. The ISM's January index of U.S.
non-manufacturing, or service-sector, activity is due on
Wednesday.
In an effort to stave off the recession, now in its second
year, investors will look toward the Senate's debates on the
economic stimulus package. But there are many serious
stumbling blocks with Senate Republicans, led by former
presidential candidate and Arizona Sen. John McCain, who is
crafting an alternative package.
"We know that the banking industry is not aiding and
abetting spending," Joy said. "If fiscal stimulus doesn't do
the job, where is the demand that will keep us afloat until
the banking system is healthy?
"This has to pass."


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