U.S. MARKET AVERAGES
For the year and for the day Dow industrial Average showed lack of conviction. While indexes S&P and Nasdaq registered 3% and 1.37% gains Dow lost 0.61% for the year.
For the day Dow closed down 67 points, Nasdaq down 13 points and S&P down 6 points. Tech stocks have been weak for the entire week. Semiconductors, storage, software and Internet stocks were out of favor in today’s session.
Among the worst performing stocks in Dow were General Motors down 48% and Verizon was down 20% for the year. Boeing and Hewlett Packard stocks were up 37% for the year.
Oil and gold finished higher for the day. Oil gained 72 cents and gold advanced $1.40. For the year crude oil price for the current contract is up 38% and gold rose 18%.
Among the companies in focus today, Citigroup Inc. slipped 24 cents on news that the company is leading a consortium offering $3 billion for a stake in Chinese bank Guangdong. Citigroup was also approved to trade the yuan as an inter-bank foreign exchange market maker.
Google Inc. (
GOOG: chart) fell more than 1% being a defendant in a lawsuit brought by Rates Technology Inc. which claims that Google inappropriately used Voice-over-IP technology in Google Talk. The American-based company is seeking $5 billion in damages.
Intel Corp. (
INTC: chart) slipped dime on news that it plans to unveil a new branding strategy.
The airline sector dropped about 1.4%, following a steady morning decline. The computer hardware sector was also weak, adding to Thursday''s losses and moving to its lowest level since late November.The oil service sector hovered slightly above the flat line, while the retail sector settled slightly below it.
Host Marriott set a new 52-week high, extending an advanvce which started in mid-November. McDermott International (
MDT: chart) hit a new peak as well.
Dow component Coca-Cola (
KO: chart) extended its December decline, setting a new 52-week low. NiSource (
NI: chart) also added to recent weakness to establish a fresh nadir.
MOVERS AND SHAKERS
NetGuru (
NGRU: chart), engineering services company, approved a per-share cash distribution of 85 cents following the company''s November sale of certain assets. The distribution will be made Jan. 27 to shareholders of record as of Jan. 17.The sock surged 43.8%.
Omni Energy Services Corp. (
OMNI: chart) agreed to acquire Preheat Inc. for $16 million in cash, 900,000 shares of stock and $4 million of buyer promissory notes. The company’s shares rose 17.2%.
Learning Tree International (
LTRE: chart), information technology educational services provider, forecast Q4 revenue of $36.5 million, down 2% compared with the year-ago period. It also expects a quarterly loss from operations of $400,000 to $600,000. The company said for fiscal 2005 ended Sept. 30, it expects to post revenue of $151.6 million, down from $152.1 million last year, and a loss from operations of $1 million to $1.2 million. The stock dropped 7.7%.
INTERNATIONAL MARKETS NEWS
Asian-Pacific benchmarks finished Friday session mixed to lower. The Nikkei led the decliners, closing the half-day trade down 1.4% to 16,111.43 as investors locked in gains ahead of the extended New Year’s holiday. For the year the Japanese benchmark climbed 40.24%. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng slid 1.12% with a total gain for 2005 of 4.5%. Taiwan’s Weighted index fell 0.7%, while India’s BSE index rose 0.7%.
European stocks finished lower Friday, reflecting profit-taking on the last working day of the year and recent weakness on Wall Street. The German DAX 30 lost 0.9%, the French CAC 40 slipped 1.2%, and London’s FTSE 100 declined 0.4%. Each of the major averages finished the year with a gain of at least 17%.
OIL, METALS, CURRENCIES
Crude oil slipped below $60 a barrel on profit-taking after a two-day rally but closed higher at $61.04 up 72 cents. London Brent fell 47 cents to $58.08.