Wall St closes out ‘09 with best gains since 2003

The benchmark Standard & Poor’s 500 index rose 23.5  percent for the year, while the Dow climbed 18.8 percent and  the Nasdaq jumped 43.9 percent from its close on Dec. 31,  2008.

It was the market’s first annual advance in two years. In  2008, the S&P 500 slid 38.5 percent when the economic crisis  led to Wall Street’s worst year since the Great Depression.

For yesterday’s session alone, though, U.S. stocks  declined, with a late-day sell-off pushing all three major  indexes down about 1 percent as investors sold some of the  year’s best-performing stocks to lock in some of 2009’s  substantial gains.

Most of the year’s advance is the result of a nine-month  rally, led by gains in technology and materials shares on  expectations the economic recovery will spur capital spending  and increase demand for energy, metals and other natural  resources.

“It really was a turnaround year,” said Charles Lieberman,  chief investment officer of Advisors Capital Management, LLC  in Paramus, New Jersey. “It shows how much of a recovery  there’s been.”

American Express, Microsoft and IBM were the Dow’s top  gainers for the year. All three ended yesterday lower,  however.

On the other hand, General Electric, long considered a  bellwether, finished second to last among the Dow components  in terms of 2009 performance, with big oil producer Exxon  Mobil Corp in last place.

Signs of an economic rebound, including more than 70  percent of companies beating profit expectations in the second  quarter, have driven the S&P 500 up 65 percent since its March  9 closing low. The dollar’s weakness throughout much of 2009  also gave the market a strong boost on hopes about exports.

Despite optimism about 2009, Wall Street registered its  first-ever negative decade on a total return basis even with  dividends reinvested. The S&P 500 is down about 10 percent for  the decade, on that basis.

After a fast sell-off late in the session, the Dow Jones  industrial average ended down 120.46 points, or 1.14 percent,  at 10,428.05. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index slid 11.32  points, or 1.00 percent, at 1,115.10. The Nasdaq Composite  Index lost 22.13 points, or 0.97 percent, to close at  2,269.15.

U.S. financial markets will be closed today for New  Year’s Day.

For the fourth quarter, the Dow rose 7.5 percent, the S&P  500 gained 5.5 percent and the Nasdaq jumped 6.9 percent.

But for the week, the Dow was off 0.9 percent, the S&P 500  was down 0.4 percent and the Nasdaq fell 0.7 percent.

The S&P 500’s top-performing stock for the year was XL  Capital  — up an eye-popping 395.4 percent in 2009. Yesterday, however, XL Capital’s stock slipped 0.4 percent to  end at $18.33 on the New York Stock Exchange.

Citigroup, down 50.7 percent for the year, was among the  worst performers in the S&P 500.

IBM rose 55.5 percent for the year, Microsoft gained 56.8  percent in 2009 and American Express jumped 118.4 percent. For  the day, IBM fell 1.3 percent to $130.90, Microsoft dropped  1.6 percent to $30.48 and American Express declined 0.7  percent to $40.52.
S&P OFF 29 PERCENT FROM RECORD CLOSE

Analysts see further upside in stocks in 2010 if the  recovery proves sustainable. The U.S. unemployment rate is  still at 10 percent — a 26-year high.

The Dow is down 26 percent from its record closing high on  Oct. 9, 2007, while the S&P 500 is down 29 percent from its  record close on that same date. The Nasdaq is down  55 percent  from its March 10, 2000, closing high. A drop of 20 percent or  more technically signifies a bear market.