While you were sleeping: Apple bolsters Wall St
Sept. 11 (BusinessDesk) - Wall Street advanced, helped by Apple shares as investors and analysts bet that CEO Tim Cook
is proving he has the ability to fill Steve Jobs’ shoes.
Shares of Apple climbed, last up 2.5 percent at US$100.45, a day after the company unveiled its new iPhone 6 and a new
Apple Watch product line. At least six brokers increased their share price targets for the company.
"We think Apple’s pipeline is finally going to satisfy those who have wondered if the company has any new products,"
Michael Yoshikami, CEO of Destination Wealth Management, told Reuters. “The stock price has been rallying as investors
are beginning to believe that Tim Cook all along was telling the truth that there is an incredible pipeline of
products.”
In late afternoon trading in New York, the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.23 percent, the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index added 0.22 percent and the Nasdaq Composite Index gained 0.54 percent.
Advances in shares of McDonald’s and those of Visa, up 1.7 percent and 1.4 percent respectively, propelled the Dow
higher.
"Equities offer better value than other asset classes, and so long as the Fed is not overly tight, the bull market will
not end. We're nowhere near that level yet,” Anastasia Amoroso, global market strategist with JP Morgan Funds in New
York, told Reuters.
US Treasuries, however, declined, sliding for a fifth straight day, amid concern the Fed might begin lifting interest
rates sooner than anticipated. The Federal Open Market Committee is set to meet next week, on September 16 and 17.
“As we get closer to ending quantitative easing, there’s always a risk the Fed comes out and says something a little bit
more hawkish,” Thomas di Galoma, head of fixed-income rates at ED Man Capital Markets in New York, told Bloomberg News. “We’re starting to see a bottom in global rates in general.”
The greenback benefited from the rise in US yields, with the US currency climbing to a six-year high against the
Japanese yen.
"US two-year rates are moving higher, you have the continuing monetary accommodation in Europe and we've had a run of
pretty bearish data in Japan,” Peter Kinsella, a strategist with Commerzbank in London, told Reuters. "I wouldn't be
surprised if we saw dollar-yen at 108-109 quite easily."
Meanwhile, shares of RadioShack plummeted for a second day, last down 11.7 percent at 83 US cents after falling as low
as 76.10 cents. Wedbush Securities said on Tuesday the company could file for bankruptcy soon, making the stock
worthless by the end of this year, according to Reuters.
In Europe, the Stoxx 600 finished the day marginally lower at 344.7, recovering from a drop of as much as 0.6 percent
earlier in the session. France’s CAC 40 slipped 0.04 percent, while Germany’s DAX fell 0.1 percent. The UK’s FTSE 100
Index eked out a 0.02 percent gain.
Bank of England Governor Mark Carney told UK lawmakers that an independent Scotland would need massive currency reserves
if it intends to continue using the pound as its currency - somewhere in the range of one year’s worth of economic
output or about 130 billion pounds.
(BusinessDesk)