Stocks climb as quarter ends

ByABC News
March 31, 2009, 10:59 AM

NEW YORK -- Wall Street resumed its advance on the last day of the quarter as investors focused on economic data.

A measure of consumer confidence inched up in March after plummeting to historic lows in February, a private research group reported Tuesday.

The Conference Board said its consumer confidence index rose to 26.0, from a revised 25.3 reading in February below expectations, but an uptick nonetheless.

The market is coming off a two-day pullback after rallying on better-than-expected home sales, retail sales and durable goods data. The Dow Jones industrials have jumped 21% in less than three weeks following a government plan for cleaning up bad assets from banks and reassuring remarks from the CEOs of several banks who said their businesses did well in January and February.

If Wall Street can get more evidence that the economy is bottoming out, it has a better chance of making up the sharp losses logged this year. The Dow is still down 14.3% for 2009, but up 14.5% from its nearly 12-year low on March 9.

Recent data have indicated the economy is "still weak, still poor, but not on a declining trend," said Rob Lutts, president of Cabot Money Management. And that's enough to encourage him to buy stocks in industries such as energy and technology ones that usually turn around when the economy does.

"I'm hopeful that by the end of the year, conditions will have improved," Lutts said. With the market already pricing in a severe recession, he said, "I don't think we need a strong improvement to get the stock market going."

On the last day of the quarter, some "window dressing" buying may also be affecting the market. Portfolio managers that may have missed out on the recent rally want to be sure they aren't left behind, said Randy Frederick, director of trading at Charles Schwab.

"Imagine you're an institutional investor, you have a lot of cash on hand and missed the recent rally," he said. "Now, you don't want to be left behind in the next quarter. You probably want to put some of the cash to work."