YOUR FRIENDS' ACTIVITY

    Discover Yahoo! With Your Friends

    Explore news, videos, and much more based on what your friends are reading and watching. Publish your own activity and retain full control.

    To get started, first

    Rally on Wall St to be put to test

    NEW YORK (Reuters) - A rally on Wall Street will be put to the test next week, with the S&P 500 at its highest level since before the collapse of Lehman Brothers in 2008.

    The broad index is up 8.6 percent for the year, closing at 1,365 on Friday. The S&P 500's close was the highest since June 6, 2008, a few months before Lehman Brothers went bankrupt as the global credit crisis spiraled out of control.

    While the swiftness and magnitude of the gains have created concerns that the market is due for a pullback, a break above 1,370, which was 2011's intraday high, could trigger more buying as investors fear missing out on further gains.

    "We have reached an exhaustion point and an inflection point. The sentiment is bullish and the money flow has gotten bullish, and that's freaking people out a bit," said James Dailey, portfolio manager at TEAM Asset Strategy Fund in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.

    "What's more likely, or normal, would be a 5-7 percent decline (from current levels), but if we move above 1,370, that could be the next leg up."

    The S&P 500 has struggled to climb above 1,370, but the level has thrown up strong resistance in the past week.

    For this week, the Dow Jones industrial average <.DJI> and S&P rose about 0.3 percent and the Nasdaq Composite <.IXIC> added 0.4 percent to close at its highest since mid-December 2000.

    Oil prices will also be in focus after Brent crude futures closed at $125.47 per barrel on Friday, the highest since last April, on fears of worsening tensions between Iran and the West.

    "The S&P and crude oil prices have been showing a correlation so far. But oil at where it is now is a big deal," said Ben Schwartz, chief market strategist at Lightspeed Financial in Chicago.

    Schwartz explained that if oil keeps rising, it will threaten consumer confidence and pressure the stock market.

    The movement in the euro will also be closely watched for hints about markets' appetite for risky investments.

    The euro on Friday rose to its highest in more than two months against the dollar and hit its strongest versus the yen in nearly four months before the European Central Bank is expected to make available another round of cheap money next week.

    The ECB's three-year, long-term refinancing operation (LTRO) could help the euro's cause. Estimates suggest that the LTRO would draw bids of anywhere between 500 billion and 1 trillion euros, setting risk appetite on fire.

    Mexico hosts a two-day meeting of the Group of 20 leading economies' finance ministers and central bankers at the weekend.

    The meeting will likely be dominated by discussion of the European debt crisis, with euro zone countries pushing for their G20 partners to commit more money to the International Monetary Fund to help victims of the crisis.

    Economic data due next week includes durable goods orders on Tuesday and revised fourth-quarter gross domestic product on Wednesday. Weekly jobless claims and ISM manufacturing data will be released on Thursday.

    (Reporting By Angela Moon; Editing by Kenneth Barry)

    See all articles from Reuters
     

    30 comments

    • Pedro Obama  •  2 months ago
      All depends on how much money the government prints next week and pumps into the market. The average guy is paying rent and buying food.....or trying.
    • Chelsea  •  2 months ago
      Let's go back and check news from the end of the week for the last four weeks. "Next Week Market Will Be Tested" see any common thread. The writers need to get a new line. The market is always tested every week, thats why it's the market.
    • George  •  Houston, Texas  •  2 months ago
      So, if the market goes up, it may break through and keep going up. And if it goes down, it will be a normal correction, and keep going down, or go up again, or go up then down again.... hey, why not go to a casino and at least have some fun gambling money?
      • Liberealist 2 months ago
        I think a lot of people enjoy playing the market for that very reason, George. It's basically legalized gambling, albeit with better long-term returns if you're consistent with your methodologly.
      • George 2 months ago
        Yes, I agree. It is "long-term legalized gambling". (By the way, I just sold and will wait for the next dip)
      • SouthSiderz 2 months ago
        you can limit your losses though with futures/commodities/options.
        In straight gambling, there is no safety net.
    • Swb  •  2 months ago
      As Mark Haynes, Bless his soul, used to say - "The market's up because it's up."
    • A Yahoo! User  •  San Jose, California  •  2 months ago
      Many on these boards say the markets are rigged, or a Ponzi scheme, or a casino. In all of those things the bottom line is the average person can’t win. In fact I’m just an average guy and I’ve won by consistently investing in the market. You can too.

      Unless you have inherited wealth or a stellar pension plan you MUST save money and invest it where you can get a reasonable rate of return. Here is a simple strategy anyone can do.

      1. Get an account at Schwab or other discount brokerage.
      2. Add to the account every month. Add what you can afford, but I put in 10% of income.
      3. Put half the money in a good bond fund. Make sure it is no-load with a low expense ratio.
      4. Put the rest into 4-5 stocks you have confidence in. Most of them should pay a dividend.

      The dividends and bond interest alone should pay 3-4 times what you’ll get in a bank. Any stock appreciation, which will happen over time, is gravy.

      You want a guaranteed way to lose? Stay out of the market and inflation will eat up your savings. The banks would love it if everyone kept their money in their 1% accounts. Don’t be suckered out of the market by these cynics.
    • John  •  Denver, Colorado  •  2 months ago
      Market analysis is pure bunk. I can tell you this; inflation is runaway and is not being reported in government metrics. You know it, I know it and Bob Dole knows it. This "market" is nothing but excess dollars being poured into 401k's, because of the loss of defined pensions, and is being "invested" by mutual fund companies the only place they have left to hope for a positive return. A corrupt rotten vapor factory called the NYSE, where profit and loss is reported by auditors that are paid for by the company reporting the profit or loss. Oh sure they will tell the truth alright... Sure they will...
    • A Yahoo! User  •  Oklahoma City, Oklahoma  •  2 months ago
      Banks are feeling another 2 trillion bucks from the world pions
      • SouthSiderz 2 months ago
        Rumsfeld stole 2.3 Trillion.
        didn't even ask.
    • R.T. Arcand  •  Minneapolis, Minnesota  •  2 months ago
      Just a bubble. Spain and Italy will get it back to 6500 soon.
    • raymond  •  Bartlett, Illinois  •  2 months ago
      What? just because some wall street bozo types in a higher number for the day I am supposed to jump? Think about it, some guy in a back room enters in a higher number and that's it, everything is good? They make that number go up or down depending on what they all decide they want to happen. Hey we need more money let's drive up that number and get some suckers in here and then just enter a lower number and POOF more millions for nothing. Sorry for being so cynical but it IS nothing more than legal gambling where they are allowed to manipulate the outcome.
      • raymond 2 months ago
        And save your insults about me being too stupid to invest, I am smart enough to know that without an inside track or pure luck you only get modest gains.
      • George 2 months ago
        Agree with Raymond, (pretty much the same as my Post): So, if the market goes up, it may break through and keep going up. And if it goes down, it will be a normal correction, and keep going down, or go up again, or go up then down again.... hey, why not go to a casino and at least have some fun gambling money?
      • Pedro Obama 2 months ago
        Absolutely flat for the past 10-12 years. Meanwhile inflation and devaluing of our currency means your "investments" are worth about 50% less best case scenario.
    • Richard J  •  New York, New York  •  2 months ago
      Every week the desperate Reuters writers give us more of this blather. Since they don't have a clue, they need to move on to something they understand like celebrity scandals or drug use among athletes.
    • Rich  •  2 months ago
      I wonder how the market will react when it realizes we are flat broke
    • JAMES A.  •  Boston, Massachusetts  •  2 months ago
      it has been tested and it flunked.
      • A Yahoo! User 2 months ago
        Flunked? Cute comment, but you obviously have no idea of how the markets have been doing over the last 6 months. Here's some advice:

        1. Get a clue.
        2. Post comments.
    • Donald  •  2 months ago
      The 2008 recession put America on an unsustainable course. It continues.
    • justacomment  •  2 months ago
      4 and 5 dollar a gallon gas should take care of any rally in pretty short order. Always does. High gasoline is absolutely positively the worst thing that could happen right now. Obamas $40 a week payroll tax cut will be a drop in the bucket compared to how much it will cost to fill up at tank at $5 a gallon.
    • TheWordofVirgo!  •  Grand Rapids, Michigan  •  2 months ago
      I won't be holding my breath.....
    • Donald  •  2 months ago
      This is why America is 30th in the World in Education? Say like N.Y News Media ( very slowly): We do not understand why GAS PRICES are so high? Why U.S. Government Debt/Deficit is so High? How come America is in DECLINE?
    • Joey JoJo Shabadoo  •  Chicago, Illinois  •  2 months ago
      All phony, folks. The Fed is manipulating the market to fleece the little guy. Play at your own risk.
    • Saint Preferred  •  2 months ago
      No "test" needed. The entire market is government manipulated. The government knows it, large investors know it, the exchanges know it, and the market-makers know it.

      You will never see another large one or two day correction again in your lifetime.
    • PUD  •  2 months ago
      There will still be some that will be "suckered in"..... if you don't have money to loose, stay out of the Market!
    • Smile2Smile  •  2 months ago
      1) We are in a technical recession, using analysis which has predicted every one now for decades
      2) Companies making money, people spending because things look good.
      3) They are still printing money like crazy.
      4) Reality states this euphoria will end.
      5) It will be a long recovery.
      6) Trying to shotgun boost short term, has long term more negative effects.
      7) 2020 should look much better.
      8) The working class and middle class recession began in 1980.
      9) Trickle down economics will appear again, if by magic - ol' smoke n' mirrors.
      10) It is to the advantage of Republican Party not to win the Presidential election.
      11) Please reference the novel 1984 to better understand today. Orwellian times!
    Loading...
    SMALL BUSINESS OPINION POLL

    Is cash flow management a headache for you?

    Loading...
    Poll Choice Options

    Friend's Activity