Tame inflation helps Wall Street higher

Wall Street was up at midday on Thursday after new data showed the Consumer Price Index up 0.1 percent in February, around what was expected, with the core CPI, which excludes food and energy prices, also up 0.1 percent, less than had been predicted. These numbers raised speculation that the Federal Reserve might end its series of interest rate hikes sooner than anticipated.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average was up 0.4 percent at mid-session, to 11,256.84, while the Nasdaq Composite had gained 0.2 percent to 2,316.44 and the S&P 500 had added 0.3 percent to 1,307.29.

Banks continued to issue quarterly earnings results. Bear Stearns said that it’s first quarter profits were up 36 percent to $514 million, up from $379 million in the same quarter last year. However, it had lost 0.4 percent by the middle of the day to $133.66. Elsewhere in the sector, Morgan Stanley was up 1.2 percent to $60.38 ahead of its earnings report, due next week.

In the automobile manufacturing sector, Ford Motors dropped 0.5 percent to $7.81 on a ratings downgrade from “overweight” to “underweight” from JP Morgan, which cited increasing competition from General Motors as its rationale for cutting Ford’s rating.

Upgrades helped out other companies in other sectors. In the telecommunications sector, Qualcomm added 2.3 percent to $50.97 on an upgrade from “neutral” to “buy” from Merrill Lynch. Among other companies that benefited from upgrades were food packaging manufacturer Bemis, which gained 6.6 percent to $33.11 and chipmaker LSI Logic, up 5.9 percent to $11.45. American Power Conversion, which makes computer parts, added 6.9 percent to $22.36.

Bookseller Barnes & Noble advanced by 11.3 percent to $48.11 after it’s fourth quarter profits beat expectations on Christmas sales.


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