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- When Good News = Good News
- Retail And Jobs Lift Mood
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Reporter
This post is from CNBC producer Robert Hum.
The market’s rally today was driven by the strong May consumer confidence numbers released at 10am ET this morning. With confidence building, the hope is that the consumer will start spending again.
Given this mindset, investors bought up consumer discretionary stocks, which led the markets higher today. Many retailers rose mid-single digits today, while casual dining restaurants ended the day up in the high single digits.
Both retailers and casual dining restaurants have been plagued by substantial same-store sales declines during the past few months amid tighter economic conditions.
With poor sales adding pressure to their bottom line, many companies depended on tight cost controls and effective expense management to sustain earnings. Nevertheless, many consumer discretionary stocks are poor performers this month (and this is even after today’s strong gains):
Retailers This Month Today
Macy’s -13 percent +6 percent
JC Penney -13 percent +6 percent
Home Depot -10 percent +4 percent
Best Buy -3 percent +5 percent
Tiffany -3 percent +6 percent
Restaurants This Month Today
DineEquity -11 percent +9 percent
Cheesecake Fact. -7 percent +7 percent
Darden Rests. -4 percent +8 percent
Brinker Intl. +1 percent +9 percent
Bottom line: unless improved confidence can ultimately translate into greater consumer spending, traders fear a rally in consumer discretionary stocks may be short-lived. While it’s good for the consumer to be building confidence, in the end, it is actual spending that drives sales. And right now, retailers and restaurants alike need to see stronger sales if they hope to improve their bottom-line results.
As a result, all eyes will be undoubtedly on Monday’s key April personal spending report.
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Questions? Comments?
- Wall Street Fears Dodd Bill
- Have Loan Losses Peaked for European Banks?
- Dow Industrials at New Highs—But Other Indices Lag
- Risk Trade Is Back On
- HMOs Up Despite Looming House Vote
- What The Street Thinks of The Jobless Report
- Friday It's All About Jobs, Jobs, Jobs
- October Retail Sales—The Good, Bad and Ugly?
- When Good News = Good News
- Retail And Jobs Lift Mood








