Market Recap – Schizo Thursday May 28

By Robert Perrego, at 3:40 pm on May 28th, 2009

A morning that started like any other morning – with multiple economic releases – and then up and down and all over the chart, ended up with a solid gain; Dow +103.78, S&P 500 +13.77 and Nasdaq +18.43

My updates through the day concerning the economic releases on unemployment and housing (both existing and new) had the market up on better than expected Durable Goods Orders, flat to down on unemployment numbers and down when you take into account the falling value of the average home and new home sales you would have thought we would have closed down 100.  Just for kicks, Bloomberg reported 1 in 8 of us is behind on our mortgages.

Yesterday, a plunge in the bond market and its seesaw partner rise in interest rates tanked the market by 183 points.  Today the 7 year $35 billion auction was successful and the market roared back up shaking off those nasty economy killing rising interest rates.  The US 10-year rallied today with the yield falling 10 basis points to 3.64% after dropping at 1 pm yesterday and rising 15 basis points into the close.

When the stock traders start paying attention to the bond market be careful.  Thsi either means they are too nervous to run their market on its own fundamentals and information or they are just plain clueless and looking for a reason how to put the next trade on.  After the huge rally from the March lows with a still difficult economy, the Bulls are getting a bit nervous and not sure just how bullish they are and this makes them vulnerable.

June NYSE Gold jumped up $8.90 to close at $958.60 after trading into the 960’s during the day.

Nymex Lt Sweet crude gained $1.63 to $64.70 and natural gas jumped on dropping reserve level news.

Tie together stock traders taking their cues from the bond market, rising gold, rising oil and rising natural gas and you are either climbing one mountainous wall of worry or this market is setting up for a fast reversal.  Why?  Gold prices rise on two things – uncertainty/fear and inflation prospects.  The prices of oil and gas rising is nothing but a tax on consumers and if the Fed fails at keeping those mortgage rates down to resuscitate the housing market this whole rally becomes very vulnerable.

Remember the last time you did not sell thinking ‘it is not so bad?’  Well, everyone else does too and everyone lost a lot of money.  This turns into ‘last one out is a rotten egg’ and the rally could not only come to a screeching halt but could give up some ground very quickly.

Today we got out up plus 100.  Tomorrow we get the revised GDP number for Q1 with the initial number coming in at -6.1%.  A downside surprise and look out below.  Some good upside revisions and this rally could be ‘game on’ once again.

Tentative and Schizo.

Tune in tomorrow, same bat time, same bat station.  The New RakedIn.com!

Dell Reports

By Taryn Cooper, at 3:26 pm on May 28th, 2009

Earnings decreased 63% in first quarter for Dell Inc, citing a drop in PC sales.

Sales of New Homes, Old Homes, Mortgage Delinquencies, Durable Goods Orders and a Schizo Market

By Robert Perrego, at 1:29 pm on May 28th, 2009

2:30 p.m. Market Update:   Dow +118, S&P +15, Nasdaq +19

On the 8:30 a.m. release of Durable Goods Orders and the Unemployment report futures jumped on a higher than expected Durables Goods Orders increase of 1.9% with the expected increase being 0.5% – good news.

The unemployment number came in pretty much as expected but the bad news there is people are still losing their jobs with the continuing claims for unemployment insurance jumping 110,000 to 6.79 million.  The question here is whether market participants are looking for ‘less bad’ numbers or if all the positive hope for an economic and market bottom, coupled with the past months solid run up in the market, starts to get buyers hungry for real actually ‘good’ news.  Another 110,000 people on unemployment insurance and the highest level of people on the handout since 1982 is not ‘good’ news.

The Durable Goods Order increase above what was expected trumped the unemployment numbers and we saw a solid open with the Dow jumping 88 points in the first 5 minutes but then started to sag.  At 10 a.m. the New Home Sales numbers hit the tape and the markets sold off hard thereafter.

356,000 new home sales was the previous number with 360,000 expected today and the number came in at 352,000.  Going down!

As everyone knows the health of housing is at the bedrock of our economic problems today and, even though existing sales came in solid at up 2.9% month-over-month yesterday, reflecting slightly improving conditions, the fact that home prices fell 19.1% year-over-year in the first quarter at a record pace does not inspire many buyers.

The Housing number tanked the market from the Dow up 80+ to down over 40 but a rally back into positive ground and then up to positive 50 points plus and subsequently trading back into negative territory but lo and behold the Treasury Bond sale today was decently received – not even a great auction – and the market fires back up.  Get the idea no one has any idea what to do?

Big news on a new search engine from Microsoft (BING), AOL getting kicked out of Time Warner, a GM deal (finally) and now Google has a big new thing called ‘Wave’ has this market Ping Ponging all over so place your bets – its going to be some ride today.

Four Ballgames;

1)  Durable Goods sold a little more which might be pent up demand.  Are people just replacing that worn out dishwasher or are they upgrading to a better one or buying one for the second house?

2)  Jobs are still being lost and that is bad no matter how you slice it or explain it away.

3)  Home sales are languishing and prices are dropping at a record pace.  Can you say ‘upside down mortgage?’

4)  One in Eight Americans are now behind in paying their mortgage.  Put this together with the fact that over 8% of us are out of work and that puts the economy behind the 8-ball.

Plug in yesterdays Treasury market plunge which raises interest rates and therefore makes homes less affordable (hey – the way prices are cratering just wait, that house is going on sale AGAIN next week) and the core problem of this whole mess – housing – is still not looking very rosy and neither is this economy.

Big Wig Boys Club Still Mastering Money

By Taryn Cooper, at 1:13 pm on May 28th, 2009

The Deal Book from New York Times has a piece on how former head of the now-defunct Wachovia Securities, G. Kennedy Thompson, has gotten a job at private equity firm, Aquiline Partners, a year after being pushed out (of course, Wachovia has been swallowed up by stalwart Wells Fargo).

I found it interesting how at the end, former Citi lead Charles O. Prince III, Stanley O’Neal from the Bank Formerly Known As Merrill Lynch and Richard Fuld at the former Lehman Brothers all have new roles.

I’ll give you a hint as to where: they are all back in the money-making biz again.

Funny, how less than a year ago, most of these names were “Mud” and they come back to master money once again.  Interesting times indeed.

Home Sales, Mortgage Delinquencies, Durable Goods Orders and Schizo Market

By Robert Perrego, at 12:10 pm on May 28th, 2009

1:10 p.m. Market Update:   Dow +10.12, S&P +5.22, Nasdaq +3.45

On the 8:30 a.m. release of Durable Goods Orders and the Unemployment report futures jumped on a higher than expected Durables Goods Orders increase of 1.9% with the expected increase being 0.5% – good news.

The unemployment number came in pretty much as expected but the bad news there is people are still losing their jobs with the continuing claims for unemployment insurance jumping 110,000 to 6.79 million.  The question here is whether market participants are looking for ‘less bad’ numbers or if all the positive hope for an economic and market bottom, coupled with the past months solid run up in the market, starts to get buyers hungry for real actually ‘good’ news.  Another 110,000 people on unemployment insurance and the highest level of people on the handout since 1982 is not ‘good’ news.

The Durable Goods Order increase above what was expected trumped the unemployment numbers and we saw a solid open with the Dow jumping 88 points in the first 5 minutes but then started to sag.  At 10 a.m. the New Home Sales numbers hit the tape and the markets sold off hard thereafter.

356,000 new home sales was the previous number with 360,000 expected today and the number came in at 352,000.  Going down!

As everyone knows the health of housing is at the bedrock of our economic problems today and, even though existing sales came in solid at up 2.9% month-over-month yesterday, reflecting slightly improving conditions, the fact that home prices fell 19.1% year-over-year in the first quarter at a record pace does not inspire many buyers.

The Housing number tanked the market from the Dow up 80+ to down over 40 but a rally back into positive ground and then up to positive 50 points plus and subsequently trading back into negative territory.

Big news on a new search engine from Microsoft (BING), AOL getting kicked out of Time Warner, a GM deal (finally) and now Google has a big new thing called ‘Wave’ has this market Ping Ponging all over so place your bets – its going to be some ride today.

Four Ballgames;

1)  Durable Goods sold a little more which might be pent up demand.  Are people just replacing that worn out dishwasher or are they upgrading to a better one or buying one for the second house?

2)  Jobs are still being lost and that is bad no matter how you slice it or explain it away.

3)  Home sales are languishing and prices are dropping at a record pace.  Can you say ‘upside down mortgage?’

4)  One in Eight Americans are now behind in paying their mortgage.  Put this together with the fact that over 8% of us are out of work and that puts the economy behind the 8-ball.

Plug in yesterdays Treasury market plunge which raises interest rates and therefore makes homes less affordable (hey – the way prices are cratering just wait, that house is going on sale AGAIN next week) and the core problem of this whole mess – housing – is still not looking very rosy and neither is this economy.