By Deepa Seetharaman
NEW YORK, Nov 21 (Reuters) - Wall Street faces stiff
headwinds in the week ahead, the fate of Citigroup largest
among them, that stand in the way of building on Friday's big
rally and preventing November from winding up as one of the
worst months for stocks on record.
The holiday-shortened week begins with President-elect
Barack Obama introducing his economic team, including
expectations he will formally nominate Timothy Geithner,
president of the New York Federal Reserve Bank, as his
secretary of the Treasury. It will end with the first key
indication on how much consumers will spend this holiday
season.
Investors will be looking to Obama and Geithner for signals
on what they'll do to stem the economic crisis.
In the past week alone, markets erased more than a decade
of gains as banks, led by Citigroup, touched new lows and
worries mounted about the likelihood of a bailout for
automakers. Stocks also reeled from a slew of negative data
that put U.S. new jobless claims at a 16-year high.
"The market is still going to remain concerned regarding
the state of the financials and the huge meltdown in the
banks," said Fred Dickson, market strategist of D.A. Davidson &
Co in Lake Oswego, Oregon.
Key economic indicators on tap for next week include
existing-home sales for October, consumer sentiment and
confidence, and weekly U.S. jobless claims data.
But market-watchers will hone in on Citigroup over the
weekend for any developments as to the future of the bank, the
second-largest in the United States by assets.
Citigroup's board is meeting Friday to discuss the bank's
options, according to a person familiar with the matter. The
bank could sell parts of the company, or merge with another
institution.
The meeting came amid reports that directors were looking
to replace Citigroup's chief executive, Vikram Pandit, and
Citigroup was cutting additional staff in Japan.
"Hopefully it'll be a positive news story, whether it be a
sale of the company, a restructuring, a new management -- the
market will take anything at this point," said Joe Saluzzi,
co-manager of trading at Themis Trading in Chatham, New
Jersey.
"That would probably continue a rally on Monday morning. If
we get nothing out of Citibank, we have a little bit of a
problem on Monday morning."
Citigroup's shares shed 20 percent on Friday to close at
$3.77, for a loss of around 60 percent for the week. In
after-hours trade on Friday Citi shares rose 6.6 percent.
WORST MONTH FOR STOCKS
For the week, the Dow lost 5.3 percent, the S&P 500 fell
8.4 percent, and the Nasdaq lost 8.8 percent, even after all
three indexes surged more than 5 percent on Friday.
The dismal week capped off a historic November that is
quickly becoming one of the worst months for U.S. stocks since
October 1987.
Through Friday, the S&P is down more than 17 percent for
the month of November, the Dow is off nearly 14 percent, and
Nasdaq is nearly 20 percent lower.
Light volume owing to the Thanksgiving holiday on Thursday
and a half day on Friday will almost certainly exacerbate
volatility, as retailers take the spotlight in the latter half
of the week. Wall Street will look to Black Friday, the day
after Thanksgiving, which kicks off the holiday shopping season
and is traditionally the biggest shopping day of the year, for
a gauge of consumer spending.
But outlooks from major retailers suggest this could be one
of the worst holiday shopping seasons in years.
"It's going to give new definition to the word 'black,'"
Dickson said. "There's a lot of attention to the retail side of
next week."
Investors will also take some cues from the outlooks of
homebuilder D.R. Horton Inc, equipment maker Deere and Co,
apparel retailer Talbots Inc and luxury jewelry retailer
Tiffany and Co.
Other retailers expected to post results next week include
American Eagle Outfitters, Borders Group, Dollar Tree and J
Crew Group.
Investors will also be eyeing news on the expected
nomination of Geithner for the Treasury post, which on Friday
sparked a huge late-day rally in stocks after it was reported
by NBC News.
Investors will be watching for a strong signal that Obama
and his team are ready to take firm action on the economic
crisis, particularly in light of the policy zigzags under the
Bush adminstration, like the recent reversal on the Troubled
Asset Relief Program.
Geithner's selection "takes away some uncertainty and gives
investors a sense of continuity," Dickson said. "It may settle
the market just a little bit."
Still, analysts note that any boost to U.S. stocks will
hinge on specific policies submitted by Obama's economic team.
"The markets will want to hear reassurance that he knows
how to handle the situation, that he's not anti-investor," said
Jay Mueller, economist and portfolio manager at Strong Capital
Management Inc.
"We'll improve regulation, but that doesn't necessarily
mean harsher regulation or more intrusive regulation."
(Additional reporting by Leah Schnurr, Rodrigo Campos, Doris
Frankel and Charles Mikolajczak; Editing by Leslie Adler)