Today's Trading

Bank M&A, eatery enthusiasm, auto deal lift small caps

SMALLCAP MARKETPLACE
Kevin Pendley | Dec 19, 2008 4:32pm EST
Rating: Unrated

Small-cap stocks pushed higher Friday, gaining a boost from merger activity in the banking sector, a jump in restaurant shares and a lift from news of a rescue plan for automakers. All of those factors help offset sloppy action in commodities, and worries about retailer sales into a key shopping weekend. The Russell 2000 (NYSE:IWM) closed up 7.09, or 1.48%, at 486.26 and is now down 37% for the year. Meanwhile, the Dow is off 35% for 2088 and the S&P 500 is down 40%.

Small caps were noticeably strong relative to large caps, fueled by M&A activity in the banking area. “I think that the M&T Bank Corp. (NYSE:MTB) purchase of Provident Bankshares Corp. (Nasdaq:PBKS) has caused investors to see value in small-cap banks and the purchase came at a nice premium,” Nick Kalivas, vice president of financial research with MF Global, said in an email interview. PBKS shares jumped 60% on the news.

Kalivas also said that positive profit news from restaurant operator Darden Restaurants Inc. (NYSE:DRI) provided a lift to the restaurant sector, which was reflected through impressive positive breadth in small-cap eateries. Small-cap restaurants on the move today included Cheesecake Factory Inc. (Nasdaq:CAKE) which jumped 12%; Brinker International Inc. (NYSE:EAT) up 29% as the firm completed a sale of the Macaroni Grill; The Steak n Shake Co. (NYSE:SNS), up 12%; and Papa Johns International Inc. (Nasdaq:PZZA) up 8%.

In addition, Kalivas said that the general atmosphere of cheaper gasoline and a mini-wave of refinancing activity provides a supportive element to the small-cap universe.

As for today’s quadruple witching expirations of stock index futures, options and single stock futures, Kalivas said that “pinning” action (which refers to . . .

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