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By MICHAEL J. MARTINEZ
The Associated Press
NEW YORK An analyst downgrade of the semiconductor sector
sent technology shares lower yesterday, but the overall stock market
ended mixed as large-caps benefited from a late-day rally.
The Dow Jones industrial average gained 25.00, or 0.2 percent,
to 10,238.22 after drifting in negative territory most of the day.
The Dow finished higher for the second straight session.
Microsoft, one of the 30 Dow stocks, gained 3 cents to $27.89.
Boeing, also a Dow stock, gained 16 cents to $50.20.
Broader stock indicators were mixed. The technology-focused Nasdaq
composite index fell 9.41, or 0.5 percent, to 1,936.92, while the
Standard & Poor's 500 index was up 1.54, or 0.1 percent, to
1,114.35. The Nasdaq has shed 5.4 percent of its value this month,
but the S&P 500 edged back into positive territory for the year.
Merrill Lynch cut its rating on the entire semiconductor sector
from "overweight" to "underweight," citing lower-than-expected
demand for both personal computers and corporate hardware. The firm
also downgraded Intel a day before it was due to release its earnings.
While some analysts still expect a strong second quarter, investors
were concerned by the continuing stream of earnings warnings and
analyst downgrades. However, most of the bearish news was confined
to the technology sector, and earnings from banking companies brought
large-cap stocks higher.
Yet the news was sufficiently muddled to cause concern on the part
of veteran market watchers.
"The market isn't really responding to good earnings,"
said Todd Leone, managing director of equity trading at SG Cowen
Securities. "Expectations have been lowered, so I suppose there's
a chance we can see a little bit of a rally as earnings season moves
forward, but I really don't know what to expect."
Trading was light in advance of major earnings reports later in
the week, including announcements from Intel, Apple Computer, Johnson
& Johnson and Bank of America.
"Right now, there's not a lot of impetus for anybody to do
anything out there," said Keith Keenan, vice president of institutional
trading at Wall Street Access. "The tech stocks are getting
hit hard, and if you see an Intel or IBM come out with a warning
or lower earnings, then you could see significant downside. But
until then, it's wait and see."
The downgrades in semiconductors weighed on the entire technology
sector. Intel slipped 33 cents to $26.24, while Novellus Systems,
a microprocessor equipment provider, fell $1.33 to $29.72 despite
beating Wall Street estimates by 3 cents per share.
The banking sector had a strong showing in its first earnings reports
of the quarter. SunTrust Banks also beat expectations by 3 cents
per share on gains in its investment, mortgage and wealth-management
businesses. M&T Bank surged $3.70 to $91.60 after it beat Wall
Street expectations by 8 cents per share.
NCR, maker of ATM machines and barcode scanners, provided a rare
positive outlook, saying its second-quarter earnings could come
in as high as 35 cents per share. Analysts had been expecting 18
cents per share. NCR was up $4.79 at $51.81.
Morgan Stanley was up 34 cents at $50.34 after settling a high-profile
sexual-discrimination lawsuit for $54 million. The Equal Opportunity
Employment Commission had accused the investment bank of denying
promotions to women in favor of less-qualified men.
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