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Stocks finished higher Monday as investors chose to focus more energy on scooping up bargains than the latest shoe dropping on the credit front -- this time from AIG.
There's a new pattern in the market, said Art Hogan, chief market analyst at Jefferies & Co., where "we're becoming a little more sector-agnostic -- we can sell off financials and have the rest of the market, which is very oversold, rally."
The Dow Jones Industrial Average, coming off its worst week in nearly five years, clawed its way back with a modest gain, as did the S&P 500 index and tech-heavy Nasdaq. Tech and energy shares posted some of the strongest gains.
The Dow experienced a bit of tug-of-war, with General Motors in the lead and AIG trying to drag the index lower.
Investors drove GM [GM
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"I think the [GM] stock has been so beaten up that people are hoping for some good news when they release their earnings," William Lefkowitz, options strategist at brokerage firm vFinance Investments, told Reuters.
Intel [INTC
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] and Home Depot [HD
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] rounded out the Dow's top three gainers.
Investor Takeaway: |
AIG [AIG
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] tumbled after the world's largest insurer said auditors are questioning the firm's valuation of risky debt. The company said the value of its risky debt portfolio plunged by $5.96 billion, more than three times what it had initially estimated. The disclosure stands in stark contrast to AIG's earlier claim that it didn't face major problems -- as some of its rivals did -- as a result of the credit crisis. AIG shares were down more than 10 percent, the stock's biggest percentage decline since the stock-market crash in October 1987, when AIG shares plunged 15.5 percent.
"If you take out today, Microsoft [MSFT
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] being down and the bombshell from AIG, we had a pretty nice turnaround," Matthew Cheslock, a senior specialist at Cohen Specialists, told CNBC. "We'd probably be up by triple digits." Instead, the Dow's gain was just under 60 points.
Lowe's [LOW
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] recovered after the home-improvement chain reported its earnings dropped 31 percent, hurt by subprime-investment losses at its CNA Financial [CNA
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] insurance affiliate.
Tim Smalls, head trader at Execution LLC, told CNBC that he still likes select financials such as J.P. Morgan [JPM
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] and People's United [PBCT
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], companies that should weather the credit storm a lot better than some of their rivals. He also likes homebuilders due to their cheap valuations, but said he's not jumping on the retail bandwagon.
Hogan said his picks include software stocks, given that the sector looks relatively undervalued and there's a lot of buzz about consolidation in the sector, most recently involving Oracle [ORCL
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] and BEA Systems [BEAS
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].
As if the Dow needed any more excitement today, Dow Jones announced a shake-up in the Dow Jones Industrial Average that will see Bank of America [BAC
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] and Chevron [CVX
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] added to the blue-chip index, and Altria [MO
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] and Honeywell [HON
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] removed. The changes take effect Feb. 19.
In announcing the changes, Wall Street Journal Managing Editor Marcus Brauchli, who oversees the composition of the Dow, said Altria was removed because it is in the process of restructuring and narrowing its focus. Honeywell was dropped because it's the smallest Dow industrial and industrials are really losing clout in the market anyway.
As for the addition of Bank of America and Chevron, Brauchli said, "we saw that the financials industry was under-represented -- notwithstanding the current turbulence -- and that the oil and gas industry's growing importance to the world economy called for another representative to join Exxon Mobil Corp."
A slew of tech news coupled with low valuations gave the sector a boost today, with solid gains in shares of Apple





