DAILY OIL PRICE: Feb. 9, 2012 (+$1.13 to $99.84)
Crude Oil 99.84 +1.13
Nymex MTD AVG 97.93
Natural Gas 2.477 +0.029
Gasoline 3.0128 +0.0376
Spreads Mar/Apr -0.40 Apr/May -0.63
Plains WTI-Posting 96.50 +1.50
Stocks close higher after debt deal in Greece
NEW YORK (AP) The stock market finally got a deal in Greece, but it didn't produce much of a rally.
U.S. stocks rose Thursday morning after Greece announced an agreement to cut costs and keep from defaulting on its debt next month, an event that could have shocked the world financial system.
But stocks dropped later in the morning and never returned to their highs for the day. Analysts cautioned that the market had expected the deal in Greece and warned that Europe still faced problems.
"We still have a lot of wood to chop," said Jeremy Zirin, chief equity strategist at UBS Wealth Management.
The Dow Jones industrial average finished up 6.51 points at 12,890.46. The Standard & Poor's 500 index rose 1.99 to 1,351.95. The Nasdaq composite index climbed 11.37 to 2,927.23.
Earlier in the day, the Dow was as high as 12,924.71, its highest level during a trading day since May 20, 2008. That was also the last day the average traded above 13,000.
In the afternoon, the S&P rose as high as 1,354.32, more than double its level on March 9, 2009, the low for stocks during the Great Recession. It last closed at double the low last July. The Nasdaq is trading at its highest level since December 2000.
The markets have had a strong start this year, mostly because of optimism about the economy. The Dow has gained 5.5 percent, the S&P 7.5 percent. But Zirin said the markets had assumed Greece would reach a deal to keep from defaulting, which is why stocks didn't skyrocket on the news.
The deal calls for Greece to make steep cuts in government jobs and spending. Greece's so-called troika of lenders — the European Union, the European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund — insisted on the cuts.
The cuts are one condition of a €130 billion bailout for Greece, without which it can't afford €14.5 billion worth of bond payments due March 20.
But the cuts will be hard to implement in a country that has grown used to profligate government spending. Workers are already protesting that job cuts and pay cuts have been too severe.






