The price of a barrel of Texas Intermediate crude is hammered as OPEC keeps production ...
Oil prices keep plummeting as OPEC starts a price war with the US
Stocks
ended mostly lower -- but with the Dow eking out a new record close --
as Wall Street separated the winners and losers tied to nosediving oil
prices and kept a close tabs on Black Friday sales. The Standard &
Poor's 500 also managed to log a six-week winning streak.
A barrel of Texas Intermediate crude was at $67.17 Friday afternoon Eastern Time -- a whopping 8.9% drop.
At
the 1 p.m. close of the abbreviated, post-Thanksgiving session, the Dow
Jones industrial average stood fractionally higher, settling at its new
record of 17,828.24, passing the level set in the previous session by a
half-point. It is the 31st record close for the Dow of 2014.
The
S&P 500 ended down 0.3%, while the Nasdaq composite gained 0.1%. All
three indexes have climbed for six weeks straight. It's the longest
climb for the three market measures since an 8-week winning streak that
ended in November 2013.
The apparent takeaway from Wall Street:
lower oil prices benefit more businesses than it hurts and has a massive
positive impact on consumers' disposable income.
"'Tis the season: energy down, consumer up," is the way Strategas Research Partners summed up the energy math.
Says
Strategas analyst Nicholas Bohnsack: "The continued decline in the
price of crude oil and the resulting savings at the gas pump will likely
continue to bolster consumer shares as the market anticipates the
positive implications on consumer spending."
Citing data from the Financial Times,
Bohnsack says Americans consume 135 billion gallons of gasoline per
year. With retail prices down $0.85 per gallon to roughly $2.78, from
$3.64 in June, the consumer is on pace to generate an estimated $115
billion in savings from lower petrol expenditures, he noted in his
report to clients.
Investors are grappling with the fallout of
yesterday's decision by OPEC to not cut its daily crude production
despite a glut of oil around the globe. Oil prices, which were already
under pressure due to weaker demand due to a sluggish global economy and
ample new supply coming online in the U.S., are plunging anew today
after the OPEC decision.
"The selling in oil was epic, with
contracts rolling over from $73.50 to $67.75 on WTI in about an hour,"
earlier Friday morning, said Paul Hickey, co-founder of Bespoke
Investment Group.
The overall stock market is not likely to get
crushed due to plunging oil prices as there are many companies --
namely consumer stocks, airlines, transportation names, cruise lines –
that will benefit from lower oil prices. The Dow, however, might suffer a
bit more than the broader stock indexes because both Exxon-Mobil and
Chevron are Dow components and are down more than 4% in pre-market
trading.
There are winners and losers related to crude plunging to a fresh 4½ year low.
Airline
shares are soaring and energy stocks are tanking in pre-market trading
in response to lower oil prices following the OPEC decision not to cut
production amid an oil glut.
The big beneficiaries of lower energy
costs are U.S. air carriers. Airlines ranging from American Airlines to
United Continental saw their shares rise 4% to 5% as investors price in
bigger profits due to lower costs for fuel. In contrast, energy shares,
including oil-and-exploration companies like Exxon-Mobil and oil
services players like Halliburton, which is down more than 4% in
pre-market trade, are seeing their shares take a big hit.
Aside from the oil pits, it's all about Black Friday today.
"Outside
of commodities,Wal-Mart and its fellow retailers will be in the
limelight in today's holiday-shortened session, as traders watch for
early signs of Black Friday success," said Andrea Kramer, an analyst at
Schaeffer's Investment Research.
end quote from:
Dow ekes out record close; oil plummets 8.9%
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