By Anora Mahmudova, MarketWatch
NEW YORK (MarketWatch)--The U.S. stock market rebounded
Wednesday, wiping out all of the previous session's losses, and
added to gains after the minutes from the latest Federal Open
Market Committee meeting were released.
Federal Reserve officials examined "several approaches" for the
eventual tightening of monetary policy but made no decisions on
which tools to use, according to the minutes from the April meeting
released Wednesday that suggested the time for higher interest
rates is drawing closer.
The S&P 500 index (SPX)rose 13 points, or 0.7%, to 1,886.84,
with gains across all 10 main sectors. The Dow Jones Industrial
Average (DJI) jumped 152 points, or 0.9%, to 16,526.79. The Nasdaq
Composite (RIXF) gained 30 points, or 0.7%, to 4,126.79.
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action.
John Canally, investment strategist and economist at LPL
Financial says the minutes presented a Goldilocks scenario for
equity markets.
"The key takeaway from the Fed minutes for the stock markets was
the fact that the Fed faces an ongoing trade-off between
unemployment and inflation. As inflation is still very low, the Fed
can continue to accommodate to target even lower unemployment
situation," Canally said.
"We think that the bond market will be proven wrong about the
current economy," he added.
Retail in spotlight
Retail companies were in the spotlight again with several
earnings releases ahead of the opening bell.
Shares of Tiffany (TIF) jumped 8.8% after the luxury-jewelry
maker reported sales and earnings that beat estimates, and lifted
its outlook for fiscal 2015.
Target (TGT) shares gained 0.5% after the discount chain posted
adjusted quarterly earnings of 70 cents a share, versus forecasts
for 71 cents, on sales that roughly matched expectations. On
Tuesday, the company replaced the president of its struggling
Canadian business.
Retail stocks were hit on Tuesday, contributing to broad losses,
after disappointing earnings from TJX Cos. (TJX) and Staples Inc.
(SPLS) among others.
Home-improvement retailer Lowe's (LOW) on Wednesday reported
first-quarter earnings that came in ahead of analyst expectations
by one penny a share, but sales missed estimates. Lowe's also
lifted its per-share earnings view for 2015. Shares were last down
0.7%.
PetSmart Inc. (PETM) dropped 8.1% after it reduced its outlook
as it delivered its quarterly results.
Shares in American International Group Inc. (AIG) rose 2% after
Goldman Sachs analysts upgraded the stock to buy from neutral and
raised the price target to $63.
Michael Nannizzi and his team wrote: "We believe AIG will
generate [systematically important financial institution]-high
capital and is best positioned among SIFI candidates to deploy
capital accretively into its core businesses if large-scale
buybacks are not a near-term option."
Netflix Inc (NFLX) shares rose 3.2% after the Internet
television network announced plans to expand across Europe.
Yellen, Dudley speeches
Janet Yellen delivered the commencement speech at Yankee Stadium
for New York University students. The Fed chief is part of a busy
Fed lineup for Wednesday.
New York Fed President William Dudley, who is a voting member of
the Fed policy committee, held a quarterly press briefing on
regional labor markets and economic conditions. Dudley's speech may
have given a sneak preview of Fed minutes.
Kansas City Fed President Esther George, who isn't a voting
member this year, delivered a speech in Washington on the economy
and banking.
Minneapolis Fed President Narayana Kocherlakota, a policy
committee voting member, speaking on monetary policy and the
economy at the Economic Club of Minnesota, said that the Federal
Reserve should target a price level rather than an inflation rate
after missing its goal for several years.
U.K. stocks fall, European stocks gain modestly
In overseas markets, European stocks made small gains as
investors kept an eye on key European Parliament elections and
purchasing-manager index data due later in the week. U.K. stocks
fell for a third day and the British pound (GBPUSD) jumped against
the dollar after the release of minutes from the Bank of England's
latest meeting that were viewed as hawkish.
Asian stocks posted moderate losses across the board, with the
Nikkei 225 index off 0.2% and the Bank of Japan leaving its
monetary policy on hold at its latest meeting.
Gold for June delivery (GCM4) dipped, while oil for July
delivery (CLN4) pared gains ahead of a report on U.S. supply data.
Citigroup also raised its Brent oil forecasts for 2014 and 2015 on
Wednesday.
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