Today's Trading

Steep slide for stocks on econ data, Bernanke, financial woes

SMALLCAP MARKETPLACE
Kevin Pendley | Jul 15, 2008 10:22am EDT
Rating: Unrated

Small-cap stocks fell hard this morning, pulled down by soft economic data, a global rout in equities, record lows in the U.S. dollar and a sobering outlook from central bank leaders. At 10:02 a.m. ET, the Russell 2000 (NYSE:IWM) was down 13.92, or 2.09%, at 650.59, the lowest level seen since March.

In Senate testimony this morning, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke will address the economy and monetary policy. In a release of the advance text, Bernanke said that the financial markets remain under “considerable stress” and that consumer spending was likely to be “restrained” in coming quarters. The immediate response to the Bernanke text headlines was that stock markets extended the morning slide.

The stock market was already taking a beating in after-hours trading before a fresh batch of economic data came out on the weak side ahead of the opening. On the inflation front, the PPI headline figure came in at plus 1.8%, which was well ahead of the forecast for a rise of 1.3% and the year-over-year figure was a sobering plus 9.2%, the largest rise since June 1981. On the consumer spending ledger, the news was also dour, with June retail sales up just 0.1%, well down from the median forecast for a rise of 0.4% as car sales notched their biggest drop in more than two years. Even when excluding autos, June sales were up just 0.8%, which also missed the forecast for a rise of 1%.

Retail sales in May were strong, and although this month’s figure missed the estimate, it was still a decent number. The problem is that May and June sales were temporarily boosted by government stimulus checks and the strength is seen as temporary from most analysts. “Despite recent strength, consumers are slowly and grudgingly succumbing to job losses, high energy prices, the housing meltdown and the financial market turmoil,” Steven Wood, chief economist with Insight Economics, . . .

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