March Comes in Like a Bull – Tech Leads the Way

By Robert Perrego, at 5:07 pm on March 1st, 2010

Technology stocks, and especially semiconductor stocks, were strong as Wall Street started March with a bullish day.  Intel Corp. (NSDQ: INTC) paced the Dow Jones Industrial Average, finishing first with a 1.65% gain (+$0.34, $20.87) and Hewlett Packard Co. (NYSE: HPQ) in second up 1.47% (+$0.75, $51.54).  The PowerShares Dynamic Semiconductor ETF (NYSE: PSI) jumped 2.76% (+$0.36, $13.38) as Entropic Communications Inc. (NSDQ: ENTR) led the broad line semiconductor sector up 7.18% (+$0.26, $3.88) after being up as much as 14.4% earlier in the day.

The Nasdaq 100 turned in the best performance for the month of February among the three major indexes, gaining 4.47% to the second place S&P 500’s 2.86%.  Everyone must have read the summary numbers for February over the weekend and then came in as buyers today as the Nasdaq 100 continued on its winning streak up 1.52% (+27.72, 1,846.40).  The S&P 500 closed up a solid 1.01% (+11.22, 1,115.71) and the Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 0.76% (+78.53, 10,403.79) on the day.

Merger Monday was in full gear as four deals were announced last night and this morning and TrackedInsights Taryn Cooper covered them all earlier today.  Rumors of the biggest deal on the planet, Germany bailing Greece out with loans, prompted the Greek 10-year bond to drop 9 basis points (6.34% to 6.25%, +0.64) and stabilized equity markets around the world.  The Chilean IPSA Index fell 1.7% to 3,761 in reaction to the 8.8 magnitude earthquake Saturday morning, which was the fifth largest recorded since 1900.

When an earthquake hits Chile, what do you buy?  The answer is not peppers, it is copper.  Chile produces 35% of the world’s copper and if any of those mines collapsed this will slow the production and supply of the base metal, sending prices higher.  The iPath Dow Jones-UBS Copper ETN (NYSE: JJC) jumped 2.73% in the first five minutes of trading this morning but faded back, closing up 1.76% (+$0.79, $45.49).

Economists expected Personal Income and Consumer Spending to increase by 0.4% month-over-month, but we got income going up 0.1% and spending up 0.5%.  This means the consumer must have been taking on debt over the last month.  In general, the market likes it when the consumer spends more, even though signs point to them taking on more debt.  If the consumer is out there spending, that means the stocks they trade are doing more business.  Damn the torpedoes!  Who is paying their debts back these days anyways?  There is a problem here though, as Personal Income increased only 0.1% (0.4% expected) with the prior M-o-M increase being 0.4% and before that 0.5%.  The growth trend we have experienced over the past few months is slowing down as workers are receiving less income, which can be attributed to less people working.

The ISM manufacturing Index was reported at 10 a.m. and missed expectations (56.5 vs. 57.4, prior 58.4).  A reading over 50 indicates manufacturing is expanding but the number below that of last month shows it is expanding less quickly.  Construction Spending was also released at the same time and was down 9.3% Year-over-Year and down 0.6% Month-over-Month.  The MoM expectation was -0.8%, so the number was beat, but it is still declining.  While a decline in construction spending means less construction workers on the job, this is probably good in the long run as a contraction in housing supply (or a slower expansion), will mean a lower relative supply of homes in the future and a firming of home prices.

Gold had an uneventful day, gaining marginally, as all the metals action seemed to be in copper today.  The fact that gold did not drop is a story on its own as the dollar traded its highest level since last July, before fading back to gain just 0.38%.  Even the news of Germany buying Greek debt did not hold the euro up as the pound dropped sharply against the dollar with the summer election for Prime Minister in the U.K. is too close to call.  The U.K. has deficit problems of their own, and it seems once you throw in the weak economies of Spain, Portugal and Ireland, the chances of another bailout being needed seems almost certain.  Italy’s budget is always an adventure and it is starting to look like the only decent economy left in Europe is Germany.

Nymex crude dropped 78 cents as the $80 a barrel level is proving to be a difficult fence to jump.  The barrel was trading at $78.88 (-0.98%) at 4:48 p.m.

Yo-Yo Market Back Down on China and Greece

By Robert Perrego, at 4:34 pm on February 12th, 2010

Remember the days when the U.S. stock market was about the U.S. economy and companies?  If not for a Chinese credit tightening and the Germans deciding the Greeks need to get their own house in order, I might be writing about Warren Buffet and the fact that Berkshire Hathaway closed the Burlington Northern Santa Fe deal.  Instead, the topics du jour are China raising their bank reserve requirements and that the deal out of Europe everyone was expecting might be falling apart.  The bottom line is that your portfolio most likely dropped in value today as the stock market closed lower on news from two OTHER continents.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 45.05 points (-0.44%, 10,099.14) today and the S&P 500 gave up 2.95 points (-0.27%, 1,075.51).  The Nasdaq 100, the strongest of the three over the past two days, closed up 3.37 points (+0.18%, 1,779.11)

After the credit markets fell apart last year the Federal Reserve dropped interest rates to near zero making the dollar a shiny new candidate for the carry trade.  China tightened credit, Asian and European stock markets dropped, Merkel caught flak from the German voters not to keen on bailing out another country and the European markets dropped lower.  Then, before our markets even opened, the carry trade cowboys were buying in their dollar short positions and entering sell orders for stocks here at home.

The market opened lower and the DJIA dropped 144 points in the first 10 minutes of trading.  Market players started putting a positive spin on the news as analysts said the gradual tightening in China would be a good thing over time and Blackrock Inc. came out and said they are increasing their Greek bond holdings.

Market players tried to put a positive spin on the China news saying a gradual tightening will keep a bubble from forming.  Another factor cited in the tightening of credit in China is that investment money is flooding in and the reserve raise is trying to sop up some of that extra cash.  It looks like money is chasing investments looking to catch that near vertical phase before the bubble pops.  If that is supposed to be the good news, here is the bad news – 50% of the commercial space in Beijing is vacant.  They are building buildings just to build something and keep the jobs.  This means there is already a bubble in China and that business is not keeping up with the stimulus generated building supply.  No tenants means no rent collected, which means no payment back of the loan taken to build the building.  When that loan comes due – crash.

Surprisingly, Caterpillar Inc. (NYSE: CAT) was up today (+$0.05, $56.20) after my picking it as a proxy trade for China yesterday.  CAT opened over a point lower and spent the rest of the day trading up.  My other China-economic news proxy trade, the iPath Dow Jones-UBS Copper ETN (NYSE: JJC) lost 1.40% (-$0.60, $42.10) but is up nicely this week (+6.91%).  The Chinese markets closed today for two weeks for New Year’s celebrations and the tightening after the close yesterday was a pretty sly move by the government.

The dollar shot up on the news that the German’s were backing away from the deal with Greece.  This caused commodities to drop as New York spot gold traded as low as $1,076.10 an ounce but spent all day recovering as the dollar dropped.  NY spot was last trading down 50 cents at $1,092.10 (4:25 p.m.).  The PowerShares DB US Dollar ETF (NYSE: UUP) gapped up on the market open and traded as high as $23.74 (+$0.19) before closing at $23.63 (+$0.08).  This is the highest close for the UUP, excluding last Friday’s close at $23.65, since July 29, 2008.  Gold holding in here solid while the dollar inches up is showing some very solid relative strength.

Nymex crude dropped $1.15 a barrel to $74.13 (-1.53%, 4:14 p.m.).  A slower China means less oil demanded and possibly the two week New Years vacation over there will also crimp demand as factories are shut down.

Next week the markets are shut for Presidents’ Day so that means a THREE DAY WEEKEND!  Hope you have the day off Monday and have a great weekend.

The Market Today – Sell, Sell, Sell! Buy, Buy Buy!

By Robert Perrego, at 5:08 pm on February 5th, 2010

After taking a beating yesterday and closing a mere 4 points off its low, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was looking very weak coming into today’s open.  Worries about the situation in Greece, Portugal and Spain had bubbled over into the U.S. equity markets as money ran to the safety of the dollar causing a sharp sell-off in stocks.  Even with this morning’s unemployment headline number dropping from 10% to 9.7%, the market opened and proceeded to continue selling off.  It looked like the bottom was nowhere in sight as nervous investors started pulling the ripcord on holdings.

Sell, Sell, Sell Mortimer!

And then at 1:59 p.m.

Buy, Buy Buy Randolph!  Buy it all!

The DJIA bottomed at 9835.09 (-167.09, -1.67%) at 1:59 p.m., which just happened to be the exact same minute that the PowerShares DB US Dollar ETF (NYSE: UUP) peaked at $23.77.  For anyone that thinks the carry trade is not a factor, think again.  As the market and the dollar are trading inversely these days, looking at the charts shows you have a hammer in stocks, and a shooting star in the dollar.  The market bottomed at 1:59 but that was not the buy signal unless you cleanly picked the bottom as Randolph and Mortimer might have if they got the real orange juice report.  The buy signal came at about 3:00 p.m., when the DJIA broke up through the intra-day downtrend line that had been putting a lid on stocks since the sell-off began yesterday after the open.

At about 3:00 p.m. the market fired higher and the volume on the S&P 500 ETF (NYSE: SPY) spiked as you could almost see traders hitting the buy button to cover their short positions from yesterday.  The S&P 500 jumped from 1,051 to 1,064 in under 15 minutes and the DJIA ripped from 9,890 to 9,999 – 109 points straight up and the rally was on!

The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed up 10.05 points (+0.10%, 10,012.23) after being off as much as 167 during the day.  This is only 10 points on the day but a victory nonetheless as the sell-off was reversed.  The S&P 500 gained 1.91 points (+0.19%, 1,065.15) and the Nasdaq 100 logged the biggest gain today up 13.13 Mockingbird Lane points (+0.75%, 1,746.12)

Nymex crude traded below $70 and was down $3.64 a barrel before bouncing back with the decline in the dollar and was trading $71.74 (-$1.40, -1.91%) at 4:10 p.m.

Gold finished strong after being weak in the morning.  New York spot gold gained 80 cents ($1,064, 4:21 p.m.) an ounce and once again held support at $1,060.  Gold also put in a nice hammer like stocks did, and this hammer pierced support forming what is called a ‘hammer and spring’, which is a powerful reversal indicator.  One of the guys on Fast Money was saying gold was ‘broke’ yesterday and I completely disagree.  After listening to everyone tell me for years now that gold was ‘over’ or in a ‘bubble’, I stayed put and watched the shiny yellow metal climb from the high $600’s in March of 2006 to the $720 bottoming out in November of 2008 to $1,060 now.  I guess I was wrong and up 55%.  Gold has pulled back from the $1200 peak but there is no direction but up if that $1.56 trillion budget deficit gets passed.  It is all about macroeconomics at this point – the one investing wave that might take awhile to play out, but is virtually unstoppable.

Looking at the Tracked.com Industries page we see that the strongest sector today was Metals, up 3.42%.  In this sector are the gold, copper, iron, aluminum, etc… producing companies and they got supercharged as traders are betting that the intra-day top in the dollar today will be the top for awhile.  When you see the market finish up a quarter of a percent (S&P 500) after being down big, and the metals rip for multiple percentage points, what you are seeing is traders trying to get on the commodities train which means they expect weakness in the dollar.  How much worse can the news get on the euro and in Greece anyway?

By buying the companies that mine and produce gold and copper, you get levered to the price of the commodity and ‘buy it cheap.’  If gold is selling for $1,064 on the commodities exchange and you buy a gold miner that digs it out of the ground for $350 dollars an ounce, you are in effect buying gold a lot cheaper than if you bought gold.

This week the DJIA (-55, -0.55%) finished off better than last week (-129, -1.26%).  Last week finished down but finished off better than the week before that (-437, -4.12%).  We are still losing ground, but the pace of the decline is slowing.  Always try to look at the silver lining. (I have friends that might fall over if they ever heard me say that)

Want more good news?  It is Friday afternoon!  Go have a great weekend!

Pfizer Hiccups and Bond Hot Potato Starts

By Robert Perrego, at 5:24 pm on February 3rd, 2010

Pfizer Inc. (NYSE: PFE) announced lower earnings than analysts had expected ($0.49 vs. $0.51) and guided lower for 2010.  Pfizer and Merck & Co. Inc. (NYSE: MRK) had both enjoyed a nice run up in stock prices in the second and third weeks of January as analysts turned bullish on Merck’s drug pipeline (see Wall Street Wrap – January 13, 2010).  Pfizer gained almost 8.5% in 5 trading days on analyst comments about Big Pharma, before the broad market sell-off that started on the 20th of January dropped all stocks.  Pfizer was the worst performer in the Dow Jones Industrial Average today, dropping $0.44 (-2.30%, $18.62).  The drug stock traded as low as $18.42 before rising back to regain support just above their 50 day EMA ($18.57).

The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped a mild 26.30 points (-0.25%, 10,270.55) during a slow trading day.  The S&P 500 closed 6.04 points lower (-0.54%, 1,097.28) and the Nasdaq 100 bucked the trend and finished up for the day, possibly in anticipation of a solid earnings report from Cisco Systems Inc. (NSDQ: CSCO).  The tech heavy index gained 7.78 points (+0.43%, 1,784.70)

Cisco reported immediately after the close, beating their sales number and trading higher in the after-market.  In what could cause a nice up day tomorrow for technology shares, Cisco reported $9.8 billion (estimate $9.4) in sales and $0.32 a share (estimate $0.35) and $0.40 (non-GAAP) in earnings.  Cisco closed the day at $23.06 (+$0.05, +0.21%) and was trading $23.82 at 5:12 p.m.

Visa Inc. (NYSE: V) also reported after the close and beat earnings estimates by 11 cents ($1.02 vs. $0.91).  About the only place in the credit-card industry you want to be invested is the transaction business as delinquencies are rising.  Visa closed the day at $83.52 (-$0.49, -0.58%) and was trading $85.02 at 5:12 p.m.

Remember that little problem we had with mortgage bonds a few months ago?  Well, it’s back!  If you thought those crappy bonds were written off and stored in a safe place, welcome to reality.  Bond and mortgage insurers such as MGIC Investment (NYSE: MTG) are refusing to pay out on delinquent loans telling the banks they misrepresented the loans they wrote and for breach of contract as they now know they insured a lot of bad paper.  The banks are saying ‘you ordered crap, you eat crap.’  Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are trying to force the banks to repurchase billions of dollars worth and it looks like a huge game of hot potato.  Analysts say that this pile of crap could go higher than $10 billion.

Copper got hit for over 4% on a rising dollar and concerns about the Chinese Government trying to moderate their growth rate by tightening credit.  The iPath Dow Jones-UBS Copper ETF (NYSE: JJC) fell $1.72 (-4.06%, $40.64).  As recently as 20 trading days ago the JJC traded as high as $48.25 which is a 15.77% plunge to today’s close.

The dollar strengthened today, reversing a two day drop.  President Obama mentioned that China and Asia would be huge markets for U.S. exports, but first we needed to address currency rates.  This sounds an awful lot like a weaker dollar policy, which would increase inflationary pressures and interest rates.  The dollar, which dropped steadily from March 9th of last year before bottoming in early December, was the source of a great deal of concern and has only rallied 6% off its bottom.  It was interesting to see Obama talking weak dollar and see the dollar rally in the open market.  Maybe traders, noticing the trend of not getting health care legislation through (buy the beaten down health care stocks) and cap and trade (buy the beaten down utilities) are betting these statements will carry as little weight.

New York spot gold dropped $4.40 an ounce on a stronger dollar (-0.40%, $1,109.00, 5:12 p.m.) and Nymex crude dropped 33 cents a barrel (-0.43%, $76.90).  Big snowstorms are supposedly bearing down on cities from Indianapolis to New York City for Super Bowl weekend and this may have kept prices firmer.

Tomorrow we get the weekly Jobless Claims at 8:30 a.m. (445k expected) and I ran across an article today saying a revision to governmental unemployment data may increase the number of people without jobs by 824,000.  Surprise!  I don’t know if this number will be in tomorrow or Friday’s numbers, but if they are, do not be surprised to see unemployment jump to 10.4 or 10.5%.  That cannot be good for stocks.  How did this happen anyway?  Someone at the Bureau of Labor forgot to carry the 8?

Economic releases for Thursday, February 4, 2010:

Monster Employment Index at 6:00 a.m., Jobless Claims and Productivity and Costs (7.0%, -3.8%) at 8:30 a.m. and Factory Orders at 10 a.m. (0.3%).

Selected earnings estimates for Thursday:

AGN 0.77 before market open, ARJ -0.04 bmo, BEBE 0.01 after the close, BG 0.83 bmo, CME 3.43 bmo, CI 0.96 bmo, CLX 0.76, DB, DO 2.32, EW 0.85, FMC 0.90 atc, GFI bmo, HI 0.12 atc, HSP 0.69 bmo, K 0.49 bmo, LZ 1.77 bmo, MA 2.46, MCO 0.41 bmo, NCR 0.26 bmo, NOC 1.26, OPWV 0.01, PBI 0.62, RGLD 0.18 bmo, SLE 0.23 bmo, SNE 0.07, SE 0.33 bmo, HOT 0.22 bmo, SRCL 0.55, SUN -0.26 atc, TEN 0.12 bmo, TM, UIS 0.83 bmo.

4 Good Economic Numbers and The Market STILL Sells Off

By Robert Perrego, at 5:01 pm on January 29th, 2010

If you were still wondering what direction the market was headed in, today should have answered that question for you.  We got a very good GDP number and three other solid economic reports today, but you wouldn’t know it looking at where the market closed.  Apple Inc. (NSDQ: AAPL) got hit again for another $7.23 (-3.62%, $192.06) bringing the two day drop to $15.82 (-7.61%).  Microsoft Corp. (NSDQ: MSFT) reported after the closing bell yesterday and beat analyst expectations, then got sold off all day long after gapping up on the open (-$0.98, -3.36%, $28.18).  Tech has been taken apart over the past two days with the Nasdaq 100 losing 77.86 points (-4.28%)

The Dow Jones industrial Average dropped 53.13 points (-0.52%, 10,067.33) and the S&P 500 closed lower by 10.66 points (1,073.87).  Usually the DJIA and S&P run at about a 10-to-1 ratio, but strength in Home Depot Inc. (NYSE: HD) and a Goldman Sachs upgrade for Wal-Mart Stores Inc. (NYSE: WMT) provided strength to the Dow Average.  Sadly, one of the reasons these stocks were strong and upgraded was they are both firing people, and therefore cutting costs.  About 8 out of 10 stocks on my trading screen finished in the red (lower) today with 12 of the 30 DJIA components finishing in the green (higher).

For the Nasdaq it was a whole different story with the only relative strength of a large cap stock provided by Amazon.com Inc. (NSDQ: AMZN).  Amazon avoided getting sold off too hard by announcing a $2 billion share buyback.  The Nasdaq 100 dropped 30.06 points (-1.69%, 1,741.04) and when the tide goes out, all the ships go down, so Amazon still closed lower by 62 cents (-0.49%, $125.41).  Why would a company announce a multi-billion dollar buyback when their stock is at an all time high, and the market is looking ripe for a retreat?  Maybe the guys running Amazon should go to their website and buy a book or two about technical analysis and trading, because if they started buying today, they stand a good chance of buying too high.

The silver lining to this cloud is that the indexes have all sold off into support levels.  The DJIA closed at 10,063 with 10,090 as support.  Two closes through support are needed to confirm a break and today is only one.  The S&P 500 is right on support at 1,071 and the Nasdaq 100 has support at 1,733.  The first half of next week’s trading will be important to show whether or not this drop is a just a pullback or the beginning of a larger decline.  The fact that the longer term uptrend lines for all three indexes have been broken leads me to believe that the market is done climbing for awhile.  When an uptrend is broken it does not mean the market is going down.  It could mean the market goes into a sideways trend or a downtrend, or it could mean sideways and then a resumed uptrend.  Only time will tell.  I think we go lower from here as it looks like the big boys are selling earnings and unloading stock.

The dollar ripped higher on the strong GDP number (5.7% vs. 4.5%) as the PowerShares DB US Dollar ETF (NYSE: UUP) gapped above its 200 day exponential moving average ($23.32) and traded even higher into its close (+0.77%, $23.45).  Commodities got hit on the dollar strength as copper was off 2.08%, coal dropped 4.56% on bad earnings from Arch Coal Inc. (NYSE: ACI), steel lost 1.62% and the ag’s were weaker by 1.09%.

Surprisingly, gold hung in there tough as now it may be trading as more of a safe haven and a currency than a commodity.  As the money rotates out of equities it looks like some of it is finding a home in the shiny yellow metal.  New York spot gold lost only $5.10 an ounce to $1,080.30, which is a 0.47% drop (4:47 p.m.)  It is unusual that the absolute percentage move in the dollar is greater than the corresponding percentage move in gold.

Oil dropped on the dollar strength as Nymex crude lost 98 cents and last traded at $72.65 a barrel (-1.28%, 4:42 p.m.)

Next week should be interesting, to say the least.  It is Friday now, after the close and high time to close the trading screen and go have a great weekend.