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NEW YORK (Reuters) - The S&P 500
fell for a third day on Tuesday but pared losses late in the day after the
parliament of Cyprus rejected a proposed tax on bank deposits. The proposed tax
on savings in banks had been a condition of a European bailout. When the
Cypriot parliament rejected the tax, the decision eased worries that savers
will begin withdrawing funds. At the same time, it left efforts to rescue the
country - the latest casualty of the euro-zone debt crisis - up in the air. "Regardless
of the vote in Cyprus, we still have the problem. No one knows: 'What is the
Cypriot financial restructuring going to look like?'" sad Nicholas Colas,
chief market strategist at the ConvergEx Group, in New York.
Banks in Cyprus will remain closed
until Thursday. The S&P 500's retreat followed a long streak of gains where
the index came close to hitting its all-time closing high set in 2007. The
S&P 500 is still on track to post its best quarter in a year. The benchmark
S&P 500 is up 8.4 percent for the year, while the Dow is up 10.3 percent. Energy
shares led the day's decline following a drop in oil prices and a slide in the
shares of oil services companies. The Dow Jones industrial average (.DJI) edged
up 3.76 points, or 0.03 percent, to close at 14,455.82. The Standard &
Poor's 500 Index (.SPX) fell 3.76 points, or 0.24 percent, to finish at
1,548.34. The Nasdaq Composite Index (.IXIC) slipped 8.50 points, or 0.26
percent, to close at 3,229.10.
During the session, the S&P 500
traded as low as 1,538.57. The S&P's swing from its intraday high to that
session low covered 18.68 points. Strategists expect the S&P 500 to still
break above its record high reached in October 2007, but they expect the rally
to slow from there. A Reuters poll of equity strategists surveyed over the past
week put the S&P 500 at 1,600 by year end, above its October 9, 2007,
all-time closing high of 1,565.15. The Dow initially surpassed its 2007 record
levels on March 5 and then set nominal record closing highs on subsequent
session through the close on March 14.
European bank shares extended
Monday's decline, with the sector's index (.SX7P) down 2.1 percent on Tuesday. "Whether
the deposit levy occurs or not, the fact that it was agreed to by the EU means
that claims on private property are not out of bounds, which pretty much says
that nothing is out of bounds," said Fred Copper, senior portfolio
manager, international equity, at Boston-based Columbia Management, in
reference to the banking crisis in Cyprus. U.S. economic data added to upbeat
views on the housing sector. Housing starts data showed that groundbreaking to
build new U.S. homes climbed in February and new permits for construction rose
to their highest since 2008, in a sign the U.S. housing market's recovery was
building momentum. The PHLX housing sector index (.HGX) rose 0.3 percent to end
at 191.79, after earlier climbing to 194.41 - its highest level since late July
2007. [Reuters]
The FBM KLCI erased losses to end
the day in positive territory yesterday, as investors bargain-hunted for short
term gains following a decline in the broader market, fund managers said.
Investors are waiting for the Malaysian Prime Minister to announce the
dissolution of Parliament. The 13th general election must be held by
end-April and many cautious and risk-averse investors have scaled down their
holdings in the local market. FKLI spot month contract opened lower this
morning at 1,620.50 as Eurozone uncertainty continues.
Today’s Support and Resistance for
March contract is located around 1,608 and 1,626 respectively.
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