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Wall Street Surges On Obama Infrastructure Plan, GM, Ford Rallies
By: iStockAnalyst   Monday, December 08, 2008 5:45 PM
Symbols: AA, AXP, BA, BAC, C, CAT, CHK, CVX, DOW, F, FCX, GM, IBM, JPM, MCD, MET, MMM, MSFT, XOM
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(By Salman - iStockAnalyst Writer)

US stocks finished sharply higher on Monday as President elect Barack Obama on Saturday announced a massive spending plan in order to boost a struggling economy. Monday’s rally was also supported by prospects of lawmakers nearing automakers’ bailout.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average advanced 298.76 points, (+3.46%), to finish at 8,934.18, a one month high. The S&P 500 rallied 33.63 points (+3.84%) to 909.70. The Nasdaq Composite soared 62.43 points (+4.14%) to 1,571.74.

President elect Barack Obama said on NBC’s “Meet the Press” program. “Things are going to get worse before they get better.” Obama announced that he will create the largest public works construction program since the inception of the interstate highway system five decades ago in order to revive the economy."We will create millions of jobs by making the single largest new investment in our national infrastructure since the creation of the federal highway system in the 1950s," said Obama.

Automakers jumped on Monday as Congressional lawmakers neared bailout plan. General Motors Corp. (NYSE: GM) rose 85 cents or 20.83% to $4.93. Ford Motor Co. (NYSE: F) rallied 66 cents or 24.26% to finish at $3.38.

Shares of raw material producers soared. Alcoa (NYSE: AA) increased $1.43 or 17.55% to $9.58. Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold Inc. (FCX) was up $3.21 or 19.11% at $20.01. Exxon Mobil (NYSE: XOM) and Chevron Corp. (NYSE: CVX) advanced 3.92% and 4.93% respectively.
 
Equipment maker Caterpillar Inc. (NYSE: CAT) added $4.16 or 10.87% to $42.42.

Boeing Co. (NYSE: BA) rose $3.32 or 8.40% to $42.85.

Financials rallied along with the broader market. Bank of America Corporation (NYSE: BAC) jumped $2.60 or $17.06% to $17.84.Both Citigroup Inc. (NYSE: C) and JP Morgan (NYSE: JPM) climbed over 9%.

American Express Company (NYSE: AXP) finished at $24.44, up $2.66 or 12.21% from previous closing.

Among technology stocks, Microsoft Corp. (NASDAQ: MSFT) and International Business Machine (NYSE: IBM) added over 5%.

Shares of MetLife (NYSE: MET) fell 73 cents or $2.37% to $30.23 after the largest life insurer in the United States said that its fourth quarter and 2009 operating earnings will miss Wall Street estimates due to meltdown in equity markets and a "significant decline in variable investment income."

Dow Chemical Co. (NYSE: DOW) leaped $1.37 or 7.21% to close at $20.37 after it announced that it will slash about 5,000 full-time jobs, dismiss 6,000 contractors, idle 180 plants and shutter 20 facilities in high-cost locations. The company said in a statement that job cuts represent about 11% of Dow Chemical's global workforce. The cost cutting measures will save $700 million annually by 2010.

3M Co.


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12/9/2008 5:28:11 PM
CEO by Jose D Roncal
Obama's Plan Sends Markets Up, But For How Long? The big news of Monday was the DOW hitting the 9,000 mark. The big question now is, “Have we hit bottom”? Our answer is, “Maybe, but don’t rush into anything on a single day’s news just because you’re worried that you might miss out.” The pundits tell us, "The market is a discounting mechanism." But relying on market "fundamentals" falls far short of explaining what’s really happening. Colorful trend charts can’t gauge the true intentions of buyers and sellers, and plugging in discount rates, risk premiums or annualized growth rates into a formula is no measure of the true fair market value of a financial asset. But there are a few facts that the market has apparently already discounted which might explain the rally of the past few days: • Monday: Stocks Rally Worldwide, DOW hits 9,000, S&P 500 hits 1-Month High on Obama Plan • The market withstood the 533,000 job loss report on Friday—worse than expected • Obama presented a proposed stimulus package with the largest expenditures on U.S. infrastructure since the 1950's • Over the weekend the Asian markets rallied, China announced expansions of stimulus package and India has approved it’s own $4 billion of stimulus infusion • The future is uncertain for the NASCAR race car economy. Formula 1 is the first victim as Honda has pulled a $300 million plug • A $15 billion bridge loan for the Big 3 U.S. Automakers will be voted on next week, which if signed would tide the industry over only until March 09 • Dow Chemical is slashing 11% of its workforce and shutting down 20 facilities • Advertising expenditures are way down and today’s retail sales report was enough to harsh Main Street’s holiday buzz The worldwide crisis isn’t going to get fixed over night. I expect further volatility in the days ahead. For instance, when corporate earnings are released in January, it could trigger more volatility. Things are likely to continue like this well into 2009 or 2010. You may agree as you consider the following: • U.S. bailout packages have been bridges to nowhere • First stimulus package of $160 billion led nowhere • New structure of financial industry still not addressed • Regulators and credit rating agencies don’t have their act together—the 23rd U.S. bank failed last week • States like California and many others are going broke, if they haven’t already, and urgently need life-support • Corporations are filing for chapter 11 or chapter 7 due to inept executives who claim they couldn’t foresee this coming • Risk management is non-existent in most organizations today – “surprises” are becoming the new standard • GM and Chrysler (even with the expected bailout) will be back for more sooner than later • Commercial lending, even though better collateralized than residential lending, could bring the issue of their $900 billion credit cards debt to the handout table. • Expect further losses and write-downs from JP Morgan, Bank of America, Citigroup as well as other major financial institutions I could go on and on without even mentioning our under-funded heath care system and other government program. There are simply not enough funds to do everything. A situation that began as a housing crisis has turned into the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression. More than $31 trillion has evaporated through equity and debt losses. And the write-downs on the books of the world largest lenders and investors is approaching $1 trillion. We’d never want to be accused of saying, “We told you so!” but the fact remains that all of this was predicted in our book "The Big Gamble: Are You Investing or Speculating?” by Jose Roncal and Jose Abbo as we’ve always maintained, that in the end, it’s all speculation.
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