Thursday, February 10, 2011

Wednesday's midday trade: market edges lower

US stocks slipped on Wednesday as a five-month rally that pushed the market to a new 2 1/2-year high started to shows signs of fatigue. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke told a congressional committee that the labour market remains sluggish and he continues to believe that inflation will remain subdued. Wall Street's reaction to Bernanke's comments was muted.

McDonald's lifts Dow for seventh day; volume light

The Dow notched a seventh straight day of gains on Tuesday, but light volume suggested that investors don't believe the more than five-month rally has the legs to keep going. Surprisingly strong sales by McDonald's boosted optimism on consumer spending and drove the Dow's gains on what turned out to be the quietest day of trading so far in 2011, with total volume about 17 percent below last year's daily average.

Nikkei average declines

Japan's Nikkei stock average edged lower to come off a nine-month high on Wednesday, as profit-taking in bank shares erased earlier gains made on upbeat earnings guidance from Toyota Motor Corp. Weakness in Shanghai shares after a rate hike from China, its second move in six weeks to rein in surging inflation, helped dampen sentiment while investors also grew cautious before the settlement of Nikkei 225 February options on Thursday.

UK's top share index slides

Britain's top share index closed down on Wednesday, hurt by heavyweight stocks trading ex-dividend and miners following metals prices lower. The FTSE 100 closed down 39.04 points, or 0.6 percent, at 6,052.29, having closed up 0.7 percent on Tuesday at its best level since May 2008.

European shares fall

European shares fell on Wednesday, retreating further from 29-month highs hit earlier this week, weighed down by miners on concerns over demand from China, though positive corporate results offered some support. Several heavyweight UK stocks, including BP, Shell and GlaxoSmithKline, traded ex-dividend, partly leading the UK FTSE 100 to fall 0.6 percent and underperform German DAX and French CAC 40.

Republicans grill Bernanke over inflation threat

Members of Congress sharply questioned Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke Wednesday over whether the Fed's policies are raising the risk of rising inflation in the months ahead. House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan, a Republican, said he is concerned that the Fed won't be able to detect inflation until "the cow is out of the barn" and inflation is already spreading dangerously through the US economy.

US job growth, inflation still too low, says Bernanke

US unemployment remains too high for policymakers' comfort despite signs of strength in the economic recovery, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said on Wednesday. In testimony to the US House of Representatives' Budget Committee that largely echoed a speech he delivered last week, Bernanke also warned about the dangers of unsustainable budget deficits.