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Stocks Gain on Fed Reassurances        05/21 16:45

   Reassuring comments from a Federal Reserve official and better earnings from 
two big retailers helped push the stock market higher Tuesday.

   NEW YORK (AP) -- Reassuring comments from a Federal Reserve official and 
better earnings from two big retailers helped push the stock market higher 
Tuesday.

   Stock indexes wobbled between gains and losses in early trading, then took a 
turn higher just before noon. That's when news crossed that James Bullard, head 
of the Fed's St. Louis branch, told an audience in Germany that the Fed ought 
to stick with its bond-buying effort to bolster the economic recovery.

   "Those words were a salve for investors' nerves," said Lawrence Creatura, a 
fund manager at Federated Investors. Other Fed officials have recently talked 
about scaling back the program. "There's a lot of uncertainty surrounding this 
issue. And uncertainty and investors aren't always a happy match."

   The Dow Jones industrial average rose 52.30 points to 15,387.58, a gain of 
0.3 percent.

   The Standard & Poor's 500 index edged up 2.87 points to 1,669.16, a slight 
increase of 0.2 percent. Both the Dow and the S&P are at record highs.

   Many investors were already looking ahead to Wednesday, when the Federal 
Reserve will release minutes from its most recent policy meeting and Chairman 
Ben Bernanke will go before Congress to discuss his outlook for the U.S. 
economy.

   "I think a lot of people are sitting on their hands waiting to see what the 
Fed says tomorrow," said Michael Binger, senior portfolio manager at Gradient 
Investments in Minneapolis, Minn.

   Binger said some investors believe the Fed's support is the main reason the 
stock market has soared to all-time highs. If the Fed pulls back, they reason, 
the market's epic rally would come to an end.

   In other trading, the Nasdaq composite rose 5.69 points to 3,502.12, a 0.2 
percent gain.

   J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. gained 1.4 percent. Shareholders of the country's 
biggest bank voted to allow Jamie Dimon to keep his two titles, CEO and 
chairman of the board. Groups had pushed to split the two jobs, a drive that 
gained momentum from a multi-billion trading loss last year. The bank's stock 
rose 73 cents to $53.02.

   Home Depot surged 2.5 percent. The retailer reported an 18 percent increase 
in quarterly income as the housing market continued to recover. Home Depot rose 
$1.95 to $78.71.

   Among other companies posting quarterly results, AutoZone jumped 5 percent. 
Better sales and shrinking costs helped the auto-parts company beat analysts' 
earnings forecasts. AutoZone leapt $18.79 to $427.84.

   It has been another solid earnings season for big companies, with corporate 
profits hitting all-time highs even as revenue barely rises.

   Seven of every 10 companies in the S&P 500 have trumped Wall Street's 
earnings forecasts, according to S&P Capital IQ. First-quarter earnings are on 
track to climb 5 percent over the year before. Revenue is expected to rise just 
1 percent.

   In the market for U.S. government bonds, the yield on the 10-year Treasury 
note slipped to 1.93 percent from 1.96 percent late Monday.

   In commodities trading, crude oil sank 55 cents to settle at $96.16 a barrel.

   The price of gold fell $6.50 to $1,377.60 an ounce, extending a slump that 
has knocked gold down 18 percent this year. Tame inflation, a stronger dollar 
and a surging stock market have undermined gold's appeal.

   Among other companies in the news:

   -- Carnival Corp slumped 4 percent. The cruise-ship operator cut its 
earnings forecast for the year late Monday as it wrestles with the fallout from 
high-profile incidents, which left passengers stranded at sea. Carnival's stock 
lost $1.51 to $33.81.

   -- Best Buy dropped 4 percent after reporting a quarterly loss and sales 
that fell short of the forecasts of financial analysts who follow the company. 
Its stock lost $1.17 to $25.64.

   -- TiVo gained 2 percent, or 26 cents, to $12.92. The digital video 
recording company narrowed its quarterly loss with the help of higher sales 
from more subscribers.


(KA)


 
 
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