Market Recap: SPX Maintains Footing Atop 1,100 as Stocks Finish Relatively Flat

Crude and gold futures suffered their steepest single-session drops since July 1

by Andrea Kramer (akramer@sir-inc.com) 7/27/2010 4:18 PM



Stocks didn't stray too far from breakeven today, as the latest round of earnings and economic reports launched a session-long battle between the bulls and the bears. In the optimists' corner of the ring was blue-chip chemical company DuPont (DD), which reported solid second-quarter earnings and lifted its full-year forecast. In addition, the S&P/Case-Shiller home price index rose 1.3% from April to May, echoing Monday's upbeat housing stats. On the flip side, the bears came out swingin' after a steeper-than-anticipated dip in the Conference Board's Consumer Confidence index, which fell to a five-month low of 50.4 in July. Nevertheless, by the time the closing bell sounded, it was essentially a wash – though Senior Technical Strategist Ryan Detrick says he'll take what he can get. "All in all, not a bad day," Detrick concluded. "Given we've just had three straight 100-point gains, today's flat market has to be considered a victory for the bulls."

CLOSING SUMMARY – INDICES

CLOSING SUMMARY – NYSE AND NASDAQ

The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA – 10,537.69) eked out a gain of 12.3 points, or 0.1%. Seventeen of the Dow's 30 blue chips ended higher, with DuPont and Hewlett-Packard (HPQ) pacing the advancers, while American Express (AXP) and Cisco Systems (CSCO) led the 13 lagging equities. After ticking higher for four straight sessions, the blue-chip barometer now boasts a 1.1% year-to-date gain.

The S&P 500 Index (SPX – 1,113.84) wasn't as fortunate as its blue-chip brethren, giving up 1.2 points, or 0.1%. Nevertheless, the SPX maintained its perch atop the 1,100 level, and is now virtually neck-and-neck with its 200-day moving average. Finally, despite exploring the region north of the 2,300 level in intraday activity, the Nasdaq Composite (COMP – 2,288.25) swallowed a loss of 8.2 points, or 0.4%, by the closing bell.

Turning to equities in focus, Level 3 Communications Inc. (LVLT) fell short of earnings forecasts ... RBC Capital slashed its price target on RadioShack Corporation (RSH) ... The Street has mild expectations ahead of Green Mountain Coffee Roasters Inc.'s (GMCR) upcoming turn in the earnings spotlight ... A skeptical options strategist bet on round-number resistance for Whole Foods Market, Inc. (WFMI) ... Merger-and-acquisition buzz sparked accelerated option activity on Genzyme Corporation (GENZ) ... and today's Quote of the Day comes from web producer Allan Grinshtein. Even after college, some adults still do their best work in the wee hours of the morning – which is why Grinshtein recently cofounded New York Nightowls, a group of highly caffeinated, laptop-toting workaholics who meet weekly in Chinatown. While some may find the virtual study hall's 10 p.m. - 4 a.m. hours utterly insane, Grinshtein counters to the New York Times:

"We're New Yorkers. It's not like we sleep anyway."

But these weren't the only headlines hitting the Street today. Click on the links below for our Daily Option Blog coverage of:

And, in case you missed it, Sarah Wasserman explained the basic principles of credit spreads in today's installment of Option Basics. Click here to watch the video.

For today's activity in crude oil, gold futures, options, and more, turn to page 2.

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