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.

Wall Street Wrap – Abbott and Xerox go Shopping

By Robert Perrego, at 5:16 pm on September 28th, 2009

Merger Monday returned in force today as Abbott Laboratories (NYSE: ABT) put up $6.6 billion cash to buy Solvay SA’s pharmaceutical unit and Xerox Corp. (NYSE: XRX) placed a stock and cash bid for Affiliated Computer Systems (NYSE: ACS) totaling $6.4 billion.  Cisco Systems Inc. (NSDQ: CSCO) caught an upgrade and, with no real bad news today, the market was off to the races.

Abbott currently markets TriCor and Trilipix cholesterol drugs in the United States and pays Solvay royalties, and this acquisition now gives them full global rights to these drugs.  Abbott sells $1.34 billion worth of TriCor/Trilipix and now this acquisition gives them full participation in the lucrative cholesterol drug space.  Abbott gained $1.25 on the day (+2.64%, $48.58) as the market approved of the deal, possibly because the deal is for cash for a proven money making franchise and no dilutive new shares will be used.

Xerox sounds like they are taking a page from the International Business Machines (NYSE: IBM), Hewlett Packard Co. (NYSE: HPQ) and Dell Inc. (NSDQ: DELL)  playbook by expanding into the software and services space and diversifying their business away from producing technical machinery and hardware.  The initial price for ACS was a 33% premium but dropped as Xerox shares lost $1.29 today (-14.45%, $7.68).  Each share of ACS will receive $18.60 per share in cash plus 4.935 Xerox shares.  ACS gained 13.98% on the day (+$1.25, $53.86).

Tech behemoth Cisco Systems got upgraded to ‘overweight’ from ‘equal weight‘ by Barclay’s and jumped 4.37% today (+$0.99, $23.61), further energizing the tech sector.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 124.17 points (+1.28%, 9789.36) and the S&P 500 was up 18.60 points (+1.78%, 1062.98).  The Nasdaq 100 was the percentage gain winner edging out the S&P 500 up 1.79% (+30.44, 1724.59).

Even with the action in tech, finance led the sector race up 3.96% with tech and energy running even both up 2.06%.  Inside the finance sector, the life/health insurance space was strongest gaining 5.42%, with the Principal Financial Group (NYSE: PFG) adding 8.41% (+$2.17, $27.97) even in the face of a Bernstein downgrade.

Gold was up early, but traded off to finish relatively unchanged at $990.00 an ounce (4:40 p.m.) as the dollar rallied mid-day.  Oil gained 82 cents to trade $67.10 at 4:40 p.m.  The dollar index future, the DXY, was up 34 cents to close at 76.99 (+0.44%).

There were no economic releases today, but the week is full with major releases starting with Consumer Confidence tomorrow at 10:00 a.m. (expected 57.0), 2Q first revision of GDP on Wednesday at 8:30 a.m. (exp. -1.2%), Jobless Claims Thursday morning at 8:30 a.m. (exp. 537K) and the Employment Situation on Friday at 8:30 a.m. (exp. -170K, 9.8%).  Besides these headline numbers, there are many other housing, manufacturing and personal finance numbers to fill the week with twists and surprises.

Let’s hope the run up today gives us enough

Wall Street Wrap – DELL, AIG and E-Trade make Moves on a Slow Day

By Robert Perrego, at 4:50 pm on September 21st, 2009

As detailed in last Friday’s RakedInSights “Wall Street Wrap,” E-Trade Financial Corp. (NSDQ: ETFC) has been in play with everything from debt for equity swaps, canceled insider selling, debt upgrades and stock upgrades.  Today, on a light volume down day for the market, E-Trade traded up as high as $2.04 or +10.9% and closed at $1.99 on over three times its average daily volume.  E-Trade is in play, and so was American International Group Inc. (NYSE: AIG) on a story that the lawmaker that chairs the Government Reform Committee might make it easier for the insurer to repay its federal obligations.

AIG recently fired up from the low 30’s to the mid 50’s in a matter of days (see past RakedInsights for more details) on a massive short squeeze.  Well, newsflash, this all could be happening again.  As the first squeeze ripped AIG higher on positive company news that caught the short sellers napping, the stock simply traded up too high and I would not be surprised if the shorts got back in sensing a profit opportunity.  This latest news, as AIG is into the government for some $129 billion or so, sounds like a very real positive catalyst for the stock that should send any remaining shorts running for cover.   AIG closed up $8.49 or +21.27% at $48.40.

DELL Inc. (NSDQ: DELL) offered $30 a share cash for Perot Systems Corporation (NYSE: PER), which is a 68% premium to Friday’s closing price.  It seems DELL could be following International Business Machines (NYSE: IBM) and Hewlett Packard (NYSE: HPQ) out of the pure computer hardware business.  Just as HP bought Electronic Data Systems, ironically another company started by Ross Perot, DELL’s acquisition of Perot Systems will diversify their revenue streams, bringing the one time pure personal computer play into the information technology services and business solutions space.

The more predictable and contracted multi-year revenue streams from IT services and business solutions can give a company a higher P/E, and thus a higher stock price, as this stabilization of revenues translates into less risk for the stockholder.

The very large 68% premium bid could be that high as DELL was making sure no one else was going to come in and bid on Perot.  DELL did not want to take the chance of another company entering a bidding war, possibly taking their new strategic direction away from them.  Hit ‘em fast and hard.  DELL closed at $16.01 (-4.07%) and  Perot Systems closed up $11.65 at $29.56 (+65.04%).

The Dow dropped 41.34 points today (-0.42%, 9778.86) and we had a split market with the Nasdaq closing positive (+6.34, +0.36%, 1731.58) on the DELL buy out.  The S&P 500 lost 3.64 points (-0.34%, 1064.66).

The energy sector led the way lower losing 1.01% with finance losing 0.88% and the industrials down 0.73%.  Consumer non-cyclicals were up 0.28%.

Gold opened down double digits as the dollar opened strong today.  New York Spot Gold traded as low as $995.20 an ounce before trading up on mid-day dollar weakness, and was last seen trading at $1,003.10 an ounce (4:20 p.m.).  Oil dropped 3.24% or $2.33 a barrel on the dollar strength, trading at $69.61 a barrel at 4:29 p.m.

Tomorrow we get ICSC-Goldman Store Sales and Redbook reports before the open.  There is a Federal Reserve Open Market Committee meeting on Wednesday and their interest rate decision is expected at 2:15 p.m.  Interest rates are expected to remain unchanged.

Market Wrap – IBM gets Analytical with SPSS

By Robert Perrego, at 4:44 pm on July 28th, 2009

Years ago IBM morphed from being a hardware company into a company with tens of billions of dollars of contracts for computer services billed out for decades.  Lenovo now owns their laptop division, they have not made desktops in a long time and it seems the large scale directional moves IBM makes are always one step ahead of their competitors.  Hewlett Packard bought Electronic Data Systems last year in order to get into the information technology and computer services sector playing catch up with IBM after seeing how the contractual revenue streams from this type of business would smooth out earnings cycles.  Basically HP was playing catch up with IBM and now IBM is drilling down into IT buying SPSS Inc. (NSDQ: SPSS) which provides analytics software and solutions and is in the growing field of business intelligence.  Starting to sound like some cloak and dagger stuff right?  Get Smart?

Dare I say it?  Today we saw more evidence of the ‘green shoots’ that were so in vogue recently but seemed to disappear from the tips of tongues of most politicians when the market took its recent down leg.  Fortunately the market has been running up as of late and so I guess we are allowed to discuss the ‘green shoots’ again.  Today, for the first time in three years, the housing market saw prices rise month over month! While the year over year average price of housing still declined, it declined at a slower rate and rose 0.5% since the previous month.  I guess that 0.5% didn’t make all you homeowners out there feel rich as Consumer Confidence dropped from 49.3 to 46.6.

San Francisco Fed President Janet Yellen, speaking in Idaho today, cited seeing the ‘first solid signs’ the economy is emerging from the recession and all day long talking heads on TV were putting the two words ‘housing’ and ‘bottom’ together in the same sentence.

Putting ‘housing’ and ‘bottom’ together should be a pretty powerful force these days but even though the talking heads chirped that all day long we had a split market;  The Dow finished down 11.79 points after being down as much as 90 points during the day.  President Yellen’s comments may have had something to do with a late day recovery.

Dow Jones  -11.79 (-0.12%, 9096.72)  S&P 500 -2.56 points (-0.26%, 979.62)         Nasdaq 100 +6.16 points (+0.38%, 1605.47).

Gold got hit straight out of the gate down $16.60 an ounce to $936.70 at 4:19 p.m. est.  The dollar strengthened today and hearings about commodities trading took their toll on oil as well.  It seems our all knowing politicians in Washington D.C. have now decided to take on regulating just how much money for how much risk people in the market should be paid.  As we all know our elected officials are the best of the best when it comes to finding a culprit to persecute before the altar of the public vote getting machine and today they decided to go with that old reliable bulls-eye they have had painted on Goldman Sachs back ever since Goldman paid the TARP funds off, flipped them the bird and told us all they were going back to business as usual of making their employees rich.  I don’t know if Goldman is crooked or just that good but they weathered the last storm well just in time for this one.  Oil closed down $1.15/barrel (-1.68%, $67.27).

The leading sector to the upside was consumer non-cyclicals (usually a defensive sector) at +0.72% and tech was up 0.25%.  energy was down 1.69% on the falling oil price and finance was the second biggest loser (not a fat loss show) dropping 0.98%.

Speaking of fat people, the Los Angeles Times ran an article about taxing fat peoples’ food as it just came to light the latest culprit reason socialized health care is so expensive (it couldn’t be that government is just ridiculously efficient could it?) is that fat people cost us a lot more money to take care of, especially once they become diabetics.  Now it used to be that taxing food was a complete political no-no as this was a regressive tax which hits poor people the hardest.  Well the way this is going I wouldn’t want to be poor AND fat because it seems if you give anyone in D.C. these days a reason to tax you, it happens.  So remember, if you want to be fat – don’t forget to be rich too.  Last time we saw a tax levied ‘for our own good’ it was driving the cost of cigarettes through the roof.  Next target – soda – if you can believe it.  I think tomorrow we move on to chocolate and jelly beans and after that the Easter Bunny gets his drivers license revoked.

Market Wrap – Bernie gets 150 and the Dow gets 90

By Robert Perrego, at 4:26 pm on June 29th, 2009

Today the Judge threw the book at Bernie Madoff who didn’t even duck.  Bernie, unaccompanied by any relatives, apologized to people who’s lives he had ruined and got the maximum sentence.  Ruth Madoff, who decided to not go out and get yelled at and hated by the general public today, issued a statement finally breaking her long silence since the beginning of this circus.

Seeing as this was said to be a $65 billion fraud (and hardly any billions recovered) maybe Bernie’s unknown henchmen were buying today from their overseas accounts as the Dow was driven up 90 points.  Let’s ask Bernie for some advice, he had great returns year in and year out for a long time before… oh yeah, ooops.  ‘Hey Bernie, do you think we have seen the lows for the year?  Do you think you have?’  I don’t think so.  Have a nice day Bernie.  Call me in 150 years, we’ll do lunch.

The market is closed Friday, so with a shortened week and the end of trading for the second quarter coming up (June 30th) tomorrow, how funds will position themselves up against a long weekend will be interesting to watch.  Today’s trading was on very light volume with less than a billion shares being traded on the NYSE and moves on lower volume are more easily given up.

Bernard Madoff came in up 150 years – up the river, and beat all major indices.  The Dow was the best mover of the three major usual indices with just over a 1% move upward (+90.99, 8529.38, +1.07%) followed by the S&P 500 (+8.33, 927.23, +0.90%) and tech brought up the rear with the Nasdaq 100 (+3.63, 1483.83, +0.24%).

New York Spot Gold was marginally down (-1.80 at $937.20 4:03 p.m. est) and oil traded up $2.33 to close at $71.46.

Consumer cyclicals, industrials and financials paced the upside move once again rising 1.13%, 1.03% and 1.03% respectively.  These three sectors leading shows an optimistic vote about the economy being cast by the market.  We did not just trade up on oil and the 99 cent store, we traded up on more economically sensitive sectors so the market is in a good mood to go higher thinking the economy is getting better.

Hewlett Packard Co. (NYSE: HPQ) closed at $38.93 (+ $1.37) within 33 cents of its high close for 2009.  By taking out $39.53 HPQ will be trading above where it was back in October of 2008 and once that level is cleared it looks like the next resistance level is $41.50.

Microsoft (NSDQ: MSFT) got its target price upped to $30 today by Deutsche Bank in anticipation of the Windows 7 release.  MSFT traded up 51 cents on the news.

For more links on Madoff – see the following Raked InSights story.