Stocks Rise Despite GDP Disappointment and Ratings Cuts

 | May 11, 2012 07:22AM ET

Equities

The Bank of Japan announced it would expand its current asset purchase program by another $124 billion, but the news had little lasting impact on the region’s markets. The Nikkei closed down .4% to 9521, surrendering a brief gain following the announcement. The Kospi rose .6%, boosted by Samsung Electronics 2.5% gain, after announcing a record $5.2 billion profit for the first quarter. The Shanghai Composite slipped .4% to 2396, and both the Hang Seng and ASX 200 declined .3%.

S&P cut its debt ratings on peripheral European countries by 2 notches, although the equity markets failed to notice. Spain’s IBEX jumped 1.7%, the CAC40 gained 1.1%, and the DAX rose .9%. Trailing behind, the FTSE posted a respectable .5% gain. Superb earnings by Swedish engineering firm, Sandvik, helped push stocks higher, as the stock rose 12.5%.

US stocks closed higher, despite disappointing GDP data. The Dow added 24 points to 13228, the Nasdaq climbed .6% to 3069, and the S&P 500 gained .2% to 1403. The Nasdaq rallied 2.3% this week, its biggest gain in 3 months.

Currencies

The Dollar fell against all major currencies on Friday. The Yen and Australian Dollar both jumped an impressive .9%, to 80.29 and 1.0467, respectively. Meanwhile, the Swiss Franc, Euro, Canadian Dollar, and Pound moved up .5% in an unusually synchronized effort.

Economic Outlook

US GDP grew at an annualized 2.2% rate in the first quarter, slower than the 2.6% expected. On a brighter note, consumer sentiment climbed to 76.4, exceeding forecasts.

Monday’s reports will include personal income & spending, Chicago PMI, and the core PCE price index. GDP data is due from Canada, with expectations for a dismal .2% growth rate.

European Shares Sink as Spain Slips into a Recession

Equities

Asian markets opened the week solidly, led by Hong Kong’s Hang Seng, which rallied 1.7% to 21094, a 6-week high. The ASX 200 climbed .8% to 4397, and the Kospi gained .3% to 1982. Markets in Japan and mainland China were closed for holidays.

GDP data from Spain showed the economy shrunk by .3% in the first quarter, indicating it had slipped into a recession. The news sent the IBEX down 1.9%, and pressured European stocks across the region. The CAC40 fell 1.6%, the FTSE dropped .7%, and the DAX slid .6%.