Dec 3

U.S. Stocks End Mixed, But Leaders Shine | Web
11/22/2010
Originally Published on Investors.com
By Mao, Vincent

Euro-zone fears and worries over the financial sector pressured stocks, but they fought back to a mixed finish Monday.

The Nasdaq rose 0.6% after having been down as much as 0.7%. It found support near the 2500 level. The NYSE composite fell 0.4%, while the Dow and S&P 500 lost 0.2% each. All three were down between 1.3% and 1.5% at session lows. Volume fell on both exchanges.

A number of leaders had a nice day. About 78 stocks in the IBD 100 ended higher.

F5 Networks (FFIV) rallied nearly 8% to an all-time high in heavy trading. The stock cleared a 128.05 buy point in a three-weeks-tight pattern. F5 provides optimization technologies for network applications. It grew earnings between 30% and 65% over the past four quarters. Sales growth ranged from 15% to 46% over the same period.

Riverbed Technology (RVBD) erased opening losses, climbing 6% to a record high. The stock found support at its 10-week moving average in October. Riverbed provides products and services that improve applications and accessibility over wide-area networks. Its earnings grew between 10% and 86% in the past four quarters. Sales grew 22% to 45% over the same period.

VanceInfo Technologies (VIT) rallied 6% as it continued to rebound from a second test of its 50-day moving average. It’s now just about 1% off its Nov. 4 record high. The stock cleared a cup-with-handle base in July. Last week, the Chinese provider of software research and development services beat views with a 24% rise in Q3 earnings. After the close, the company announced a secondary offering of 2.2 million American depositary shares.

Group mate HiSoft Technology International (HSFT) gapped up and added 4% in heavy trading. It too is rebounding from a test of its 50-day line. Before the open, the Chinese IT services provider delivered Q3 earnings of 21 cents a share, up 163% and 3 cents above views. Sales grew 53% to $38.9 million, also above views. The company also guided full-year profit at 82 cents or 83 cents a share vs. views of 77 cents.

Outside of technology, Chipotle Mexican Grill (CMG) climbed 5% to an all-time high. That puts shares 57% past a buy point from a cup-with-handle base cleared Sept. 1.

On the downside, financials were some of the session’s worst performers. The Financial Select Sector SPDR dropped 1.4%. Big banks such as Goldman Sachs (GS) fell 3% and Morgan Stanley (MS) lost 2%. Both are laggards with Relative Price Strength Ratings of 49 and 14, respectively. “Several factors weighed negatively on financial stocks today,” noted Harry Rady, CEO and portfolio manager at Rady Asset Management.

First, Barclays Research reported that the top U.S. banks may have a shortfall of $100 billion to $150 billion in capital as per Basel III standards. Second, the effort to bail out Ireland continues to put pressure on Financials. And last, the FBI conducted raids on a few hedge funds related to a new alleged insider-trading probe.

Elsewhere, Hewlett-Packard (HPQ) reported October fiscal Q4 earnings after the closing bell. The company earned $1.33 a share, up 17% and 6 cents over views. Sales grew 8%, also beating views. HP also guided fiscal Q1 profit and sales above analysts’ estimates. Shares rose 1% in extended trading.

The second estimate of the Q3 GDP, existing home sales and the minutes from the Nov. 3 Fed minutes will be out Tuesday.