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.

China and Massachusetts Drive the Market Lower

By Robert Perrego, at 5:15 pm on January 20th, 2010

Mining stocks got hit today as the market took back what was gained Tuesday on the hopes of a Republican win in Massachusetts.  Hardest hit was Silver Standard Resources, Inc. (NSDQ: SSRI), which dropped 8.72% (-$2.02, $21.15).  Yesterday we tacked on 116 points on the hopes of a 41st vote for the Republicans in the U.S. Senate.  Well, the party was last night, the Republican candidate Scott Brown won and today the market posted its worst loss since November.  Hangover.  The party was being all happy about the possibility the Repub’s could block the Dem’s grand spending plans which would keep the debt, spending and taxes down.  The hangover is realizing that if Obama does not print the greenback into oblivion, if all of a sudden the trillion dollar health plan may not pass, then the expectations for a weak dollar will decrease.  Now ask yourself what the carry trade cowboys, who are short the dollar and long stocks and commodities, are going to do?

The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 122.28 points today (-1.14%, 10,603.15) with 24 of 30 components finishing lower. The S&P500 lost 12.19 points (-1.06%, 1,138.04) and the Nasdaq 100 led the charge lower as weak tech caused the index to close down 27.53 points (-1.45%, 1,867.95)

International Business Machines (NYSE: IBM) reported after the close yesterday and beat earnings, and also took first place in leading the DJIA lower today losing $3.89 (-2.89%, $130.25).  They sold the Intel Corp. (NSDQ: INTC) earnings after beating estimates and, starting in the after-market yesterday, they sold the IBM earnings beat as well.  Keep an eye on what happens to the eBay Inc. (NSDQ: EBAY) earnings announced after the close today and Google Inc. (NSDQ: GOOG), which reports after the close tomorrow.  If both these companies beat, and they sell the stock off after, this quarters reporting play is to sell tech earnings after the announcement.

The banks were strong today relative to the rest of the market as Bank of America Corp. (NYSE: BAC) reported a loss of 60 cents.  This loss included a one-time charge of $4 billion for a TARP payment spurring an Oppenheimer analyst to raise his rating on the stock.  BofA led the DJIA higher today gaining 17 cents (+1.04%, $16.49).  Bank of New York Mellon Corp. (NYSE: BK) posted a 49 cent per share profit after charges and 60 cents before, which beat the analysts’ estimate of 51 cents, powering the  stock higher by 4.84% (+$1.43, $30.96).  Wells Fargo & Co. (NYSE: WFC) posted an 8 cent per share profit with the analysts expecting a 1 cent loss.  Wells Fargo stock dropped 1.62% (-$0.46, $27.82).  Morgan Stanley (NYSE: MS) posted 29 cents per share profit with the analysts expecting 36 cents, causing the stock to drop 1.70% (-$0.53, $30.63)

Other than a Republican winning the Senate seat long occupied by Ted Kennedy, the big news today was a report that Chinese authorities asked some commercial banks to stop giving loans for the rest of the month of January.  China’s top banking official denied the report, but then again they had nothing to do with the Google hack last week right?  The Shanghai Composite dropped 2.9% on the report and a tightening of the loans in China will slow growth there and here as well.  The more buildings China builds the more Caterpillar, Inc. (NYSE: CAT) tractors they buy.

The combined news of the election in Massachusetts and the loan tightening in China caused the PowerShares DB US Dollar ETF (NYSE: UUP) to gap higher this morning on the open.  The UUP gained 1.22% on the day (+$0.28, $23.12) and broke its short term down trendline.  The stochastics for the UUP are reversed at a low level and heading higher so, with this breaking of a trendline and the stochastics all bullish, the chart points up for the dollar.

As a result of the report that China is slowing down their economic growth and that the dollar might be given a reprieve from death row, commodities got hit hard today.  Steel got hit for 3.11%, coal lost 2.86%, copper down 2.68% and gold down 2.39%.  New York spot gold lost $27.20 an ounce (-2.39%, $1,1140.40, 4:50 p.m.) and Nymex crude was down $1.59 a barrel (-2.00%, $77.73)

UPDATE: eBay earnings came in at 44 cents a share vs. the expected 40.  Revenue was reported to be $2.4 billion with expectations of $2.29.

Selected earnings for Thursday, January 21, 2010:

ACS 0.99 after the close, AXP 0.56 atc, APH 0.49, BNI 1.22 atc, COF 0.45 atc, CMA -0.49 before the open, ED 0.76, CAL -0.07 bmo, ELX 0.16 atc, FCS 0.17 bmo, FITB -0.31 bmo, GS 5.20 bmo, GOOG 6.45 atc, ISRG 1.71, ESI 2.36 bmo, KEY -0.39 bmo, LM 0.31 bmo, PNC 0.77, PPG 0.73 bmo, PCP 1.64 bmo, UNP 1.04 bmo, UNH 0.73 bmo, WDC 1.36 atc, XRX 0.22 bmo

Economic reports for Thursday:

Jobless Claims 8:30 a.m. 440K expected

Leading Indicators 10 a.m. 0.7%

Philadelphia 10 a.m. Fed Survey 18.0

Market Drops on Good Earnings. Buy on Rumor, Sell On News?

By Robert Perrego, at 4:48 pm on January 15th, 2010

Intel Corp. (NSDQ: INTC) traded to a 52 week high yesterday and then reported a 33% earnings beat (40c vs. 30c) after the close, beat their revenue number by $400 million and promptly sold off 3.16% today (-$0.68, $20.80).  Welcome to the world of stock trading.  After announcing earnings, Intel traded up in the after-market by 50 cents yesterday and everything looked like a go for semiconductor and technology stocks today.  This is the third Friday of the month and that means it is an options expiration day, which can add volatility to the market and exacerbate moves.

After buying some Intel in the after-market yesterday you would be all ready for what could happen today – an Intel rally.  Well, what did happen is that the semiconductor space got sold off across the board with Micron Technology Inc. (NYSE: MU) dropping 5.59% (-$0.60, $10.13), Analog Devices Inc. (NYSE: ADI) down 3.37% (-$1.01, $28.96), Maxim Integrated Products Inc. (NSDQ: MXIM) losing 3.21% (-$0.62, $18.65), ST Microelectronics (NYSE: STM) falling 2.74% (-$0.25, $8.87) and Texas Instruments (NYSE: TXN) hanging in there but still off 0.84% (-$0.21, $24.50).  Buying into an earnings announcement but not waiting around for the numbers seems to be working as the news is getting sold.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average had 27 of 30 stocks finishing lower and lost 100.90 points (-0.94%, 10,609.65) for the day.  The DJIA sold off hard right out of the open, trading down until finally finding a bottom at 1 p.m. at 10,561.  The afternoon session brought the index back by 48 points as bargain hunting and short covering started.  The S&P 500 dropped 12.43 points (-1.08%, 1,136.03) and the Nasdaq 100 lost 22.00 points (-1.16%, 1,864.52).

The good news for JP Morgan Chase & Co. (NYSE: JPM) was that they beat earnings solidly (72c vs. 61c) and had their revenues come in up 32% year-over-year.  The bad news was that they reported large losses on mortgage and credit card loans and that they increased their loan loss reserves.  Bad news also came out today from Bank of America Corp. (NYSE: BAC) as they stated that their credit card charge-offs rose and Capital One Financial Corp. (NYSE: COF) had their credit card charge-offs top 10%.  Did everyone make their November payment, buy Christmas gifts on plastic as a last hurrah and lock up the checkbook?  All the market saw was three strikes and the bank stocks are out!  Bank of America lost $3.32% (-$0.56, $16.26), JP Morgan dropped 2.26% (-$1.01, $43.68) and Capital One fell 1.29% (-$0.54, $41.13).  Dick Bove, a well known bank analyst, was on CNBC after the close and stated that the banks would have $40 to $45 billion of write offs by the end of 2010.  So now you tell us?

E-Trade Financial Corp. (NSDQ: ETFC) ripped from $1.71 to $1.82 within the last 20 minutes of trading today as more rumors of someone buying them hit the market.  These rumors hit every few weeks but this time the rumor says these talks are so far along that E-Trade is not longer accepting new accounts.  Well E-Trade could be no longer accepting new accounts for another reason too – bankruptcy.

Baidu.com Inc. (NSDQ: BIDU) is up $81.19 since Google Inc. (NSDQ: GOOG) announced that they were hacked and pulling out of the Chinese market.  The interesting second story on this is that Google hacked the hackers back and found some evidence the Chinese Government may be involved.  Nonetheless, the clear winner from this digital espionage is Baidu, as the 21% jump has put the stock back above the uptrend line it held since July of 2009.  Whether or not it stays above the trendline is not known, but I doubt the Chinese Government is backing down and now, after making such a big stink, Google would lose face (and the respect of a lot of people who think they are the good guys for taking a stand) if they go back into China.  Baidu is a buy.

The PowerShares DB US Dollar ETF (NYSE: UUP) gapped higher and commodities sold off.  In recent columns I have written about this ETF dropping below its 50 day exponential moving average ($22.745) and looking weak.  Today the UUP closed above its 50 day EMA, gaining 13 cents (+0.57%, $22.27).  If the carry trade cowboys started getting short the dollar the last few days they are in losing positions now, but they may be shorting more and averaging their price higher.  This is because the UUP has a nicely defined downtrend line off the peak of December 22nd.  Until the UUP closes above this downtrend line the short trade is still looking good.  As usual the dollar and the DJIA went in opposite directions today.

Oil dropped on warmer weather and a strong dollar.  Nymex crude dropped $1.44 a barrel to $77.95 (-1.81%, 4:14 p.m.).  New York spot gold also got hit on the strong dollar losing $11.50 an ounce (-1.01%, 1,130.00, 4:19 p.m.)

Have a great weekend.

Large Cap Tech Strong, IBM Highest Close Since 2000

By Robert Perrego, at 4:37 pm on January 14th, 2010

Large capitalization tech stocks filled 4 of the 5 largest percentage gainer slots in the Dow Jones Industrial Average today.  Intel Corp. (NSDQ: INTC), Microsoft Corp. (NSDQ: MSFT), International Business Machines (NYSE: IBM) and Cisco Systems Inc. (NSDQ: CSCO) placed 2 through 5 with yesterday’s star, Merck & Co., Inc. (NYSE: MRK) leading the pack again.  Merck had follow through strength after gaining 3.67% yesterday on an upgrade, as mentioned in this column yesterday.  IBM (+$2.08, +1.59%, $132.31), the old-school tech and business services company, has been in a sustained uptrend for 14 months now and is less than $6 from its all-time high of $138.  IBM is exhibiting incredible relative strength here in what is supposedly a ‘bad’ economy.

The DJIA was up 29.78 points today (+0.27%, 10,710.55) with Merck up 2.72%, Intel up 2.48%, Microsoft up 2.00% and Cisco up 1.25%.  The S&P 500 gained 2.78 points (+0.24%, 1,148.46) and the Nasdaq 100 rose 1.29 points (+0.08%, 1,887.38)

All eyes are on Intel as they are expected to report 30 cents a share today ($10.2 billion revenue expected) for Q4 2009 after the close today.  This is 2 cents higher than Q3 2009 and only 13 cents less than what Intel has earned over their last 4 quarters combined.  Intel is up over 75% from its bottom in February 2009 and traded heavy volume today of over 130 million shares.  It looks like a lot of people believe in the Intel rebound in earnings, and they must see the stock going higher as with that much volume trading and the stock moving higher the buyers have to be believers.  No one buys a stock to see it go down.

The DJIA broke 10,700 and the US dollar future spot price (.DXY) traded it’s lowest level since December 8th as it looks like the carry trade cowboys may be back in business.  The PowerShares DB US Dollar ETF (NYSE: UUP) has now spent its fourth consecutive day below its 50 day exponential moving average (-0.26%, -$0.06, $22.64) and looks to be going lower.  Seeing this, the cowboys figure; “Hey, the Fed’s not raising rates anytime soon and that dollar looks like its going lower.  Throw some shorts on that doggie and let’s buy some stocks!”

UPDATE: Intel reports $10.6 billion in revenues and 40 cents a share.  The stock is trading higher by 50 cents in the after-market ($21.97, 4:19 p.m.)  Tech should be strong tomorrow.

Oil dropped again.  I also did not freeze on the way to work today.  Warmer weather is causing a pullback from the spike higher the energy sector saw last week.  The weak jobless claims and retail sales reports this morning show a weak economy and less economic activity, and therefore less oil demanded.  Nymex crude dropped 50 cents a barrel (-0.57%, 4:15 p.m.) to $79.20.

Gold gained $5.40 an ounce as it tries to rebound from a $25 slide two days ago on the Chinese interest rate hike.  The daily stochastics for gold look to be peaking here and this second peak, which is lower than the all time high peak set back on December 3, 2008, will be the first two points a downtrend line can be drawn through.  The technical picture for gold is looking weak in the short term.  New York spot gold was last seen trading at $1,141.70 an ounce (+0.40%, 4:40 p.m.)

Tomorrow we get the Consumer Price Index (0.1%, 0.1% expected) and the Empire State Manufacturing Survey (13.0) at 8:30 a.m.  At 9:15 a.m. Industrial Production (0.6%, 71.9%) numbers are announced and at 9:55 a.m. Consumer Sentiment (74.0) is released.

Major Earnings Reports for Friday: JPM 0.62 expected, before the open.

Another Slow Week On Wall Street

By Robert Perrego, at 1:20 pm on December 19th, 2009

Stocks went up and down this week on Wall Street as they always do and the net result on the broadest stock index, the S&P 500, was a loss of 0.36% or 3.94 points.  On Monday, the S&P 500 closed at its highest level of 2009 at 1114.11.  On Tuesday the dollar jumped higher and the markets sold off.  The biggest moves of the week were the fossil fuels as inventory data and a cold front sweeping North America drove natural gas higher by 10.97% and crude started the week below $70 and finished above $73 for a 4.73% gain.

For over a month the S&P 500 has been in a narrow sideways trading range between 1087 and 1110, with exception for Monday when a short-lived breakout was attempted.  The S&P 500 closed out Friday near the middle of this range at 1102.  While the S&P 500 is the broadest stock index, the tech heavy Nasdaq 100 closed out the week at 1807, nearer to the high end of its trading range (1767 to 1810) showing that tech is less susceptible to a rising dollar.  The weakest index, relatively, has been the Dow Jones Industrial Average which closed nearest to the lows of its range at 10,328 (10,300 to 10,480).

The connection the dollar has to stocks is via the much talked about carry trade.  With U.S. interest near zero the weak dollar has been shorted by the ‘carry trade cowboys’ and those funds put to work buying stocks and other ‘risky’ assets.  The relative strength of tech stocks shows that when the dollar rises and the shorts need to cover, the stocks they are least willing to sell to replace these funds are technology stocks.

At the start of the week the biggest story was a monster deal in oil and gas with Exxon Mobil Corp. (NYSE: XOM) buying XTO Energy (NYSE: XTO).  Exxon’s fossil fuel portfolio is heavily weighted towards oil and XTO towards natural gas.  This buyout may be a large play to hedge the historically wide spread between the costs on natural gas and oil.  Thus far the 10% rise in natural gas and 4.73% rise in oil has proven this strategy correct.  Monday also saw Citigroup Inc. (NYSE: C) get clearance from the U.S. Treasury to repay their TARP funds.

The Federal Open Market Committee held their last two-day meeting of the year on Tuesday and Wednesday, and announced they were standing pat on interest rate policy.  Comments on the decision to leave rates unchanged indicated that the Fed saw job losses slowing, but jobs were still being lost.  Of most importance in this announcement may have been that they were ending their quantitative easing program (purchases of agency backed mortgage debt) on February 1, 2010.

Wednesday also saw the Federal Trade Commission file a suit against Intel Corp (NSDQ: INTC).  The lawsuit cites bundling practices and even a secretly redesigned compiler software that makes their competitors chips run a little slower.  Intel competitors Nvidia Corp. (NSDQ: NVDA) and Advanced Micro Devices (NYSE: AMD) traded higher on this news.

On Thursday, Standard and Poor’s downgraded the government debt of Greece to BBB- causing investors to flee to the safety of the dollar and dump their riskier assets.  This caused the largest losses of the week for stocks as the DJIA dropped 132 points, which comprised most of its total loss for the week.  Citigroup sold 5.4 billion shares and the Treasury, as the secondary price was too low for its liking, decided not to sell any of their shares.  Gold dropped $40 an ounce on the dollar strength.  The SPDR Gold Trust (NYSE: GLD) closed below its 50 day exponential moving average for the first time since August.

On Friday the dollar traded higher but reversed course and closed flat.  Gold bounced back $15 an ounce and the GLD regained the 50 day EMA, closing just above.  Common technical analysis theory states one of the conditions for a break in a support level to be two consecutive closes below it.  The bounce back in gold saved the technical picture and also, now that the support level has been shown to hold, the bullish picture for gold is a bit stronger.  Beware, this might seem like the bottom of the ‘dip’ that all the gold bulls say you should buy, as the next few days will give a clearer picture as to whether the dip drops or pops.

Friday was a quadruple options expiration day and the action in the last 20 minutes contained more volatility than all day long.  The last 20 minutes saw the stock indexes run up into the close.  Once again, tech was relatively strong as the Nasdaq 100 rose all day long on earnings announcements by Oracle Corp. (NSDQ: ORCL) and Research in Motion Ltd. (NSDQ: RIMM) Thursday after the close.

On the week the action was in the fossil fuels and gold.  Below are some ETF and stock index movements that sum up the week.

Dow Jones Industrial Average  -143 points, -1.36%

S&P 500  -3.94 points, -0.36%

Nasdaq 100  +15.26 points, +0.85%

Gold ETF (GLD) -$0.37, -0.34%

Copper ETN (JJC)  -1.3 cents, -0.03%

Coal ETF (KOL)  +14 cents,  +0.4%

Oil ETF (USO)  +$1.18, +3.33%

Natural Gas ETF (UNG)  +$1.05, +10.97%

Steel ETF (SLX)  -11 cents, -0.18%

Agriculture ETF (DBA)  -1 cent, -0.03%

Dollar ETF (UUP)  +$0.33, +1.45%