Mon 31 Dec 2007
Wall Street is set to end 2007 with modest gains this week and kick off the new year with all eyes trained on jobs data for signs of recession that could make 2008 a hostile environment for stocks reports Reuters.
Volume will probably be thin on Monday, when New Year’s Eve coincides with the final trading day of 2007. The market will be shut for New Year’s Day on Tuesday. But Wednesday, Thursday and Friday will be closely watched because the first five trading days tend to mirror the market’s performance over the course of the year.
“There will be cash flows that come in right at the beginning of the year that portfolio managers try to get deployed early,” said Fred Dickson, market strategist and director of retail research at D.A. Davidson & Co, in Lake Oswego, Oregon. “That may give us a lift, unless they decide to take their time and survey the overall economic landscape.”
The financial and consumer discretionary sectors were the two major victims of the subprime mortgage meltdown in 2007. Of the 10 S&P major industry groups, they were the only ones to end the year in negative territory.
Whether the housing market’s meltdown and the resulting credit crisis claim any further victims depends on the job market. The U.S. economy maintained low levels of unemployment in 2007, which helped keep consumer spending flowing.
Read it here: Recession question to mark 2008
