In a holiday-shortened trading week, the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) ended up 0.26% for the week at 12982.95. The index constantly flirted with the symbolically significant 13000 mark, even going over it a few times in day trading, but did not close once above it. The NASDAQ Composite and the S&P 500 both continued to rise as well, finishing up 0.41% and 0.33% respectively for the week.
On February 21st, Eurogroup officials delivered a long term refinancing option for Greece that included a large haircut of 53.5% for private bondholders and the option for creditors to swap into new bonds with a maturity of 30 years. Investors responded positively towards this new LTRO which, pending bondholder cooperation, should reduce Greece's debt by 107 billion euros and avoid a massive default when 14.4 billion euros worth of Greek bonds come due on March 20th.
Crude oil futures finished the week at $109.87 per barrel, indicating that gas prices will soon eclipse the dangerous $4 per gallon benchmark. Several commodities analysts reported on the possibility of crude reaching $130 per barrel by this August, near the record highs of Summer 2008.
Investors were heartened by the Labor Departments latest report that initial jobless benefit claims for the week were unchanged at 351,000 (the lowest since March 2008) and the four week average fell to 359,000, the lowest in four years.
In terms of fourth quarter earnings reports, Hewlett-Packards woes continued as they announced a 44% year over year drop in profits to $1.5 billion. Retail stocks performed relatively well this week with Target leading the pack on the back of better than expected 4Q earnings. AIG reported earnings of 82 cents per share that far outpaced analyst estimates of 62 cents per share, sending its stock price up. The company enjoyed a $17.7 billion gain due to the release of the allowance of deferred tax asset valuation.
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Editorial Staff
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