Oversold Tech Sector Rallies Hard, but Players Retain Skepticism
For once, a broad-based rally that doesn't come with qualifiers. Well, except for the lousy volume.
Perhaps the surprisingly good weather in the Northeast this weekend has folks freshly scrubbed and confident today, as all major indices at midsession were well into the green, led by buying in the technology sector.
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was rallying, up 146, or 4.6%, to 3351, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average
had gained 150, or 1.5%, to 10,449, while the S&P 500
was up 25, or 1.8%, or 1403. The small-cap Russell 2000
was up 10, or 2.1%, to 467. Some expected a negative reaction from this morning's release of the Consumer Confidence Index
, which rose to 144.4 in May, a four-month high after falling to a revised 137.7 reading in April. The survey demonstrates that job security and wage growth are more than offsetting the decline in stock prices in the mind of consumers, and analysts worry that the Fed
may remain in attack mode in its efforts to slow the economy. Regardless, traders say that investors are balancing those concerns against the belief that the technology sector has been wrecked enough to provide a good buying opportunity. Big-cap tech stocks are leading the way, including the Nasdaq Stock Market's most active, Cisco (CSCO Quote), up 2 11/16 to 57 5/8 on 24.3 million shares; Nextel Communications (NXTL Quote), up 9.7%; and Adobe Systems (ADBE Quote), up 9.4%. Major technology indices were strong, including the Philadelphia Stock Exchange Semiconductor Index, gaining 6.8%, and the Nasdaq Telecommunications Index, up 6.3%. New Lehman Brothers analyst Dan Niles transferred a lot of his coverage from his old shop, Robertson Stephens, and reiterated support of computer and chip stocks overall this morning. TheStreet.com Internet Sector index was up 37, or 5%, to 790, helped by the likes of eBay's (EBAY Quote) 6.6% gain and a 6.3% advance in Yahoo! (YHOO Quote). As with all rallies, this one provokes traders to question whether it will sustain itself, especially with worries about the Fed, and the market's recent tendency to quickly give back what it has gained. "People saw opportunities and then took them," said Randy Billhardt, co-head of block trading at PaineWebber. "Certainly, the Nasdaq had been in oversold territory, and we're seeing strength there and in the financials, but there's not a lot of oomph behind the move." It has investors thinking that the market may be in for a week similar to last week, where a day of mostly positive action alternates with a day of dreary, ugly selling. Already, there's a couple of important economic reports in the market's way this week, including the National Association of Purchasing Management's Market Internals
Breadth was solidly positive on modest volume. New York Stock Exchange: 1,711 advancers, 1,066 decliners, 467 million shares. 29 new highs, 41 new lows. Nasdaq Stock Market: 2,444 advancers, 1,329 decliners, 756 million shares. 24 new highs, 85 new lows.For a look at stocks in the midsession news, see Midday Stocks to Watch, published separately.
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