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Stocks mixed as holiday rally stumbles

Wall Street’s holiday rally stumbled Monday, with stocks finishing mixed as investors worried over the strength of the pharmaceutical sector. Another merger, between a pair of regional utilities, buoyed confidence in the overall economy and pushed blue-chip stocks higher.
/ Source: The Associated Press

Wall Street’s holiday rally stumbled Monday, with stocks finishing mixed as investors worried over the strength of the pharmaceutical sector. Another merger, between a pair of regional utilities, buoyed confidence in the overall economy and pushed blue-chip stocks higher.

Pfizer Inc.’s surprise announcement Friday, in which it disclosed serious health risks in high doses of its arthritis drug Celebrex, roiled the pharmaceutical sector. Pfizer, a Dow Jones industrial, once again took losses, while other drug stocks remained mixed.

The proposed $12 billion deal between Illinois utility Exelon Corp. and New Jersey utility Public Service Enterprise Group Inc. gave investors reason to be confident, since continuing merger and acquisition activity bodes well for the stock market. That led analysts to conclude that Wall Street’s year-end rally still had momentum.

“I think it’s a little bounce from the selling we saw on Friday,” said Chris Johnson, manager of quantitative analysis at Schaeffer’s Investment Research in Cincinnati. “Certainly Pfizer rattled some cages, and we had some of that knee-jerk selling across the board. Today they’re coming back.”

The blue-chip Dow Jones industrial average closed with a gain of 11.68 points, or 0.1 percent, while the broader Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index finished a fraction of a point higher. The technology-rich Nasdaq Composite index closed Monday down 7.35 points, or 0.3 percent.

A drop in crude oil futures, which retreated after last week’s large gains, also fed large-cap buying. A barrel of light crude was lately quoted at $45.65, down 63 cents on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

Wall Street welcomed the latest reading from the Conference Board’s index of leading economic indicators. The index, a forward-looking view of the economy, rose 0.2 percent in November, better than the 0.1 percent rise expected on Wall Street. The index had fallen 0.3 percent in October.

Some investors were betting that the good economic news would combine with Wall Street’s traditional “Santa Claus” rally to produce gains through the next two weeks. Since 1972, the Dow has gained an average of 1.1 percent in the five days before Christmas and 0.99 percent in the five days afterward, according to Michael Sheldon, chief market strategist at Spencer Clarke LLC.

“You have a couple of things pulling the market in different directions,” Sheldon said. “In general, the economy is doing pretty well, but the market is also somewhat overbought right now and ripe for profit taking. I would give the market the benefit of the doubt through the new year because of the way the markets rise around the holidays.”

Pfizer said it will pull advertising for Celebrex until the seriousness of the drug’s health risks, which include an increased chance of heart problems, can be determined. Celebrex and a related drug, Bextra, represent 10 percent of the Dow component’s total sales, and analysts warned that Pfizer could fall further if forced to pull those drugs from the market.

After dropping more than 11 percent Friday, Pfizer lost $1.46, or 5.67 percent, to $24.29, its lowest close since Dec. 26, 1997. Other drug stocks were mixed, as Merck & Co. fell 8 cents to $31.51, Eli Lilly & Co. dropped 72 cents at $55.30 and AstraZeneca PLC gained 19 cents at $27.39.

While the Exelon acquisition of PSEG still requires regulatory approval, investors were already celebrating the move. Exelon climbed $1.19 to $43.05, while PSEG surged $3.29 to $50.56.

Mortgage giant Fannie Mae slid 89 cents to $69.42 after its board met Sunday to discuss a possible shakeup of its executive team in the wake of severe accounting discrepancies. No announcements were made after the meeting.

Sprint Corp. rose 17 cents to $24.84 after it gave its profit outlook for 2004 and into 2005, which were within Wall Street’s estimates. The forecasts, however, did not include the impact of Sprint’s $35 billion proposed merger with Nextel Communications Inc., or the proposed spin-off of its local business. Nextel added 13 cents to $29.93.

Pepsi Bottling Group Inc. said its profits for 2004 should come in above Wall Street forecasts, but warned that profit growth for 2005 will slow. Pepsi Bottling was down 33 cents at $27.

Overseas, Japan’s Nikkei stock average rose 0.23 percent. In Europe, Britain’s FTSE 100 closed up 0.73 percent, France’s CAC-40 gained 0.51 percent for the session, and Germany’s DAX index climbed 0.7 percent.