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Wall St Week Ahead: Rally's stamina hangs on Europe

Bailout deal for Spain's banks, Greek polls hold key to market behaviour

Read more on:    Nasdaq | IMF | Wall Street | S&P 500 | Dow Jones | Euro zone crisis
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Investors celebrated US stocks' best week in 2012 on Friday, but a cloud hangs over , and it's what may happen in debt-plagued Europe this weekend.

Spain is expected to ask the euro zone for help with recapitalising its banks, a deal that could ease markets' most immediate concern about the region's financial crisis.

The euro zone's finance ministers will hold a teleconference to discuss the request, which at minimum could cost $50 billion, according to the International Monetary Fund.

"All eyes are on what will happen with Spanish banks over the weekend. The level of uncertainty is high and the fear in the market has certainly elevated," said Amy Wu, equity derivatives strategist at RBC Capital Markets in New York.

Wu noted that the volatility skew in options, which had decreased gradually throughout the week, has moved back up. Volatility skew, which is affected by sentiment and the supply-demand relationship, measures the premium for downside puts compared to upside calls.

Investors and US policymakers worry Europe's political and financial woes will threaten the fragile US economic recovery.

Besides Spain's weakened banks, parliamentary elections are scheduled in Greece on June 17. The results could decide whether the country continues austerity measures it agreed to as part of an international bailout or whether Greece leaves the euro zone.

BAD NEWS PRICED IN

Wall Street has been hit hard by other concerns, including signs of a slowdown in U.S. growth and shrinking demand in China, the world's No. 2 economy.

But some market participants said investors have priced in bad news out of the euro zone.

"I don't think a lot more downside is in the cards at this point" unless there is another shock, said Natalie Trunow, chief investment officer of equities at Calvert Investment Management in Bethesda, Maryland, whose firm manages about $13 billion in assets.

The broad S&P 500 index fell 6.3% in May, its largest percentage drop since September. The Dow's 6.2% drop and 's 7.2% loss in May were their largest monthly declines in two years.

On June 1 the S&P 500 ended below its 200-day moving average for the first time this year, but the index clawed its way back above the key level and rallied later in the week on hopes Europe would find solutions to its problems.

"The market has been basically expecting bad news since earlier this year, so we have been pretty well hedged to the downside. Now, it's the rally that is scaring people." Wu said.

"You don't want to be that person having to explain to your boss why you missed the rally."

For the week, the Dow advanced 3.6%, the S&P 500 rose 3.7% and the Nasdaq jumped about 4%.

The upcoming US economic calendar includes data on producer prices and retail sales on Wednesday. Reports on the consumer price index and initial weekly jobless claims are set for Thursday. Data on Friday includes Empire State manufacturing and US industrial production.

 

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Wall St Week Ahead: Can EU deal lift stocks?

U.S. stocks finished the first half of the year with a bang as investors welcomed news that the euro zone is a step closer to solving its ...

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