Market Wrap – Dell and Intel looking good, Dow gains 75 points on the Week

By Robert Perrego, at 5:02 pm on August 28th, 2009

Today the Dow and S&P 500 finished lower while the Nasdaq 100 added 2.27 points.  The relative performance by the Nasdaq was the result of good news out of the hardware space by Dell (NSDQ: DELL), which beat top and bottom line numbers after the close yesterday.

Dell beat the top line revenue number by $200 million ($12.8 billion vs. $12.6) and beat the bottom line earnings number by 5 cents ($0.28 vs. $0.23).  CEO Michael Dell stated that Dell expects strong performance in 2010 helped by a replacement cycle sparked by the release of Windows 7 by Microsoft (NSDQ: MSFT), which is due in October.  DELL gained $0.27 on the day (+1.76%, $15.93).

Intel (NSDQ: INTC) raised their third quarter expected revenues by $500 million saying chip sales were looking up.  Combining this news with the Dell release, a case can be made that the tech sector could be gaining new life and coming out of this recession.  Intel gained $0.78 today (+4.00%, $20.25).

On the week, the Nasdaq 100 was mostly unchanged gaining just over 5 points (+0.3%, 1643.24).  The Dow rose 75 points this week (+0.7%, 9580.63) and the S&P 500 was up 2.8 points (+0.3%, 1028.93).  The week was characterized by low volume and a zig-zagging market with many reversals.  Over the past 5 years the month of August has had the following returns for the Dow; +1.4%, +1.1%, +1.7%, -1.5% and +0.3% with the average being a gain of 0.6%.  With the Dow up 0.7% for the month thus far, it looks like we are right on track to keep with the August trend – a gain with low volume.

Gold gained $6.70 and finishes the week at $955 an ounce.  Looking at the weekly chart of the SPDR Gold Trust (NYSE: GLD), shows that gold has closed out the week no lower than $93.00 in the past 6 weeks, and today’s close at $93.87 is the highest weekly close for the GLD in 12 weeks.  Oil gained 25 cents on the day and traded just below $70 as its low for the week while trading $75 for the weekly high.  Today’s close at $72.76 leaves oil right in the middle of its weekly range.

American International Group (NYSE: AIG) went vertical again, trading up 5 points in the pre-market with the stock spiking to the day high of $55.80 within two minutes of the open.  Yesterday, AIG closed at $47.85, so adding $7.95 within two minutes while trading five million shares may qualify as a blow off top (commonly associated with peaks in a stock).  The trading frenzy settled a bit after the first hour of trading, as the stock proceeded to form a rough symmetrical triangle intra-day, otherwise known as a spring or a coil.  This formation is most commonly a continuation pattern, but can also signal a reversal if the stock breaks down below the lower uptrend line forming the triangle.

A second signal a stock is breaking down out of a triangle is when it trades lower than the previous definable bottom forming the triangle.  AIG broke through this level of $53.80 at 11:25 a.m. and the stock promptly dropped like a stone, trading all the way down to $45.55 in 53 minutes (12:18 p.m.)  To put into perspective how crazy this volatility is, this one move in 53 minutes is more than 99% of stocks move on any given day.  AIG rebounded of its lows and closed at $50.20 (+4.9%, $2.39).

With this being one of the ‘doldrums of summer’ trading weeks for the markets, the traders that are not on vacation and gunned up for action, seem to have adopted Fannie Mae (NYSE: FNM), Freddie Mac (NYSE: FRE), Citigroup Inc. (NYSE: C) and AIG as their ‘roll the dice and let’s have some fun’ stocks.  This is kind of like a group of teenagers hanging out on the street corner trying to see what kind of trouble they can get into to stave off boredom.  If you are playing any of these stocks make sure you are nimble, make sure you are quick because Market Jack can take away this candlestick in the blink of an eye.

The major headlines for the week included; the U.S. is $2 trillion more in the hole, signs the housing market might be bottoming out, Ben Bernanke keeps his job but loses his identity, trading in AIG goes crazy, Alan Stanford engages in blood rituals and the Boeing Dreamliner 787 may FINALLY fly.

Have a greet weekend.

P&G’s Lafley “forced” to use the company plane

By Mark Pason, at 3:08 pm on August 28th, 2009

Procter & Gamble (NYSE:PG) Chairman and CEO Alan Lafley’s latest comp numbers hit the tape today and we can all rest easy knowing his annual compensation increased only slightly, from $23.532mm to $23.605mm.  What peaked our interest is a footnote on Page 39 of the P&G Proxy about corporate aircraft use.  We know this is a hot-button issue with shareholder activists and shareholders in general.  Mr. Lafley may want to show the common folk that he’s one of them and fly commercial. . .but he can’t.  That’s right, according to the Proxy, Lafley MUST use the corporate jet for any and all travel.

“While company aircraft is generally used for Company business only, Mr. Lafley is required to use Company aircraft for all air travel, including travel to outside board meetings and personal trave, pursuant to the Company’s executive security program established by the Board of Directors.  While traveling on Company aircraft, Mr. Lafley may bring a limited number of guests (spouse, family member or similar guest) to accompany him.”

You can’t blame the guy for flying the P&G Express to Nantucket or Palm Beach for the weekend, because he has no other choice.  He’d love to stand in line at the ticket counter with you or me, but if he does, he violates his contract.  After all, the man is in charge of selling a lot of diapers, tampons, toothpaste, pet food and Pringles.  Imagine if a noisy passenger overheard him discussing the secret ingredient of Fixodent?  Seriously, we understand the need for sound executive security, but forcing someone to fly on the corporate jet is bit overboard.

ALERT: AIG dropping fast. Intra-day symmetrical triangle formation signaled a drop once $53.50 level broken. Now trading $49.Rush to get out

By Tracked.com , at 11:56 am on August 28th, 2009

ALERT: AIG dropping fast. Intra-day symmetrical triangle formation signaled a drop once $53.50 level broken. Now trading $49.Rush to get out

Reading the Open – Crazy AIG and Is the Dollar controlling the Market?

By Robert Perrego, at 10:18 am on August 28th, 2009

The 8:30 a.m. release on Personal Income and Outlays showed that the month-over-month change to personal income did not rise 0.1% as forecast and that it went unchanged at 0.0%.  Consumer spending rose 0.2%, below the 0.3% expected increase and this number is important as the U.S. economy is 70% driven by the consumer.  Even though this number missed, any increase is a good sign.  The PCE core index (personal consumption expenditures) was flat at 0.0% which is good news to all of us since this means our personal prices did not rise.

American International Group (NYSE: AIG) once again jumped and is seen trading up $6.37 at $54.21 at 10:14 a.m.  An interesting note about AIG is that while everyone sees this as the short squeeze of the year, AIG traded over 148 million shares yesterday with only 134 million shares outstanding.  Already at 10:14 a.m. AIG traded another 32 million shares.  How many shares were short prior to this ’squeeze’, and how many days this action continues as the shorts supposedly scramble to cover is unknown.  Was EVERYONE short the entire company?  I think this is technically impossible so how much more there is to cover cannot be much.  It looks like this means the stock has basically become the Las Vegas of stocks for traders looking for some volatility.  Momentum traders, day traders, scalpers, and adrenaline junkies during a the slow August weeks all have AIG on their screens to roll the dice and hopefully make a fast buck.

QUESTION:  As the U.S. Government owns a fair share of this company, and the short squeeze and current speculation has driven the price higher, will Obama come out and demonize these ’speculators’ while they are making the stock jump higher and making the U.S. of A. money?  Prior to now the term ’speculator’ has been a four letter word for this Administration.

E-Trade Financial group (NSDQ: ETFC) is up 10% on an S&P upgrade of their bonds from CC junk to CCC junk.  E-Trade issued $1.76 billion of convertible debt as part of a debt swap with Chicago-based hedge fund Citadel Investment Group LLC, E*Trade’s biggest debt and equity holder, getting in on at least $1.2 billion of this action.  Citadel has been doubling and tripling down on E-Trade for over a year and now and owns a very large percentage of this company.  E-Trade comes back from the dead here and gets acquired by a rival and Citadel could make a very large amount of money.

Gold was up over $10 an ounce before the 9:55 a.m. release of the University of Michigan Consumer sentiment number.  The number came in above expected, 65.7 vs. 64, but looking at the charts show that the Dow and Gold reversed at that time.  The Dow was trading at 9597 at 9:54 and dropped to 9556 by 10:00 a.m.  The SPDR Gold ETF (NYSE: GLD) traded $94.04 at 9:54 a.m. and then by 10 a.m. was trading $93.73.  The GLD trades at approximately 1/10th the price per ounce of Gold so that is about a $3.10 drop per ounce.

Looking at the dollar we see a slight jump up after the Consumer Sentiment release and this explains the drop in gold.  The United States Oil Fund (NYSE: USO) chart is similar to gold as it shows a drop that correlates with the jump in the dollar.  Has the dollar and commodity stocks, on another light volume trading day, taken over the market as a push in any direction by the commodity stocks are the plays that are basically moving the indexes?

It is Friday, and as we have had a pretty much directionless week, my best guess is the market trades off today and in particular watch the 2:30 to 4 p.m. trading session as traders will not want to hold larger positions over the weekend.

ALERT: AIG trading $52.50 in pre-market action above the $50.04 high from yesterday

By Tracked.com , at 9:21 am on August 28th, 2009

ALERT: AIG trading $52.50 in pre-market action above the $50.04 high from yesterday