Alcoa gains steer S&P towards 15-month peak
Wednesday, Dec 23, 2009
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An upgrade to Alcoa and a flurry of deal activity helped lift US stocks higher yesterday.
Analysts at Morgan Stanley raised Alcoa, the country's largest aluminium producer, from "equal weight" to "overweight", saying they expected a rally in aluminium prices to continue into the first half of next year. Shares in the group rose 7.9 per cent to $15.73.
The weaker dollar helped to lift commodity-based stocks. United States Steel gained 6.3 per cent to $52.35.
The S&P 500 finished just short of a 15-month closing high, gaining 1.1 per cent to 1,114.05.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average had gained 0.8 per cent to 10,414.14 and the Nasdaq Composite was 1.2 per cent higher at 2,237.66.
Deal news in the construction and pharmaceutical sectors also helped to revived overall confidence in the market.
Bucyrus International , the construction company, announced that it had bought Terex 's mining business for $1.3bn.
In October, Terex posted its fourth straight quarterly loss after demand for construction equipment continued to fall during the recession. Terex jumped 9 per cent to $20.94 while Bucyrus climbed 9.8 per cent to $55.84.
Athersys , the pharmaceutical company, sold the rights of its stem cell treatment for inflammatory bowel disease to Pfizer for up to $111m. Athersys shares more than doubled to $2.40 while Pfizer was up 1.7 per cent to $18.61.
Incyte also sold the rights to its experimental pill to treat inflammatory conditions to Eli Lilly & Co
Incyte, which could receive as much as $665m in additional payments, rose 2.8 per cent to $8.73. Eli Lilly edged 1.5 per cent higher to $36.24.
Elsewhere in the pharmaceutical sector, Human Genome Sciences rose 5.1 per cent to $29.60 after the drugmaker was rated "overweight" at Morgan Stanley.
Analysts cited the growth potential of Benlysta, which could be the first drug approved for lupus in 50 years.
Health insurers led the market higher from the opening bell after Senate Democrats pushed back the start date of a proposed insurer tax.
The tax, which is expected to drive up premiums, was originally set to begin next year, eating into insurers' 2010 earnings per share.
Aetna advanced 4.7 per cent to $34.04, Cigna climbed 3.9 per cent to $37.19 and UnitedHealth added 2 per cent to $32.17.
Denny's slid 5.7 per cent to $2.30 after the restaurant chain announced two top executives had resigned in the wake of a sharp decline in sales. During the third quarter, sales at restaurants open for more than a year were down 6.6 per cent.
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