Housing and Auto Data Send the Market Higher

By Robert Perrego, at 5:36 pm on February 2nd, 2010

Housing, financial and auto companies blazed the market path lower last year as the poster children for the economic nightmare that took the Dow Jones Industrial Average from its all time high of 14,198 to the low at 6,469.  Today, while Paul Volcker continued beating up on the banks, Ford Motor Co. (NYSE: F), General (Government) Motors and D.R. Horton Inc. (NYSE: DHI) released data giving the market optimism and also 117 points.  Ford reported their January sales increased 25% and GM was up 14% while Toyota and Chrysler dropped.  D. R. Horton actually posted a profit and the Pending Home Sales Index increased by a percentage point on a month-over-month basis, showing a flicker of strength in the housing sector.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average added 111.32 points (+1.09%, 10,296.85) with 28 of 30 companies finishing with gains while the S&P 500 rose 14.13 points (+1.30% ,1103.32).  The Nasdaq 100 lagged behind, gaining only 16.20 points or 0.92% (1,776.92)

Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner defended the largest budget ever proposed in the history of the world, as Senators grilled him on President Obama’s new $3.8 trillion budget, fully loaded with a $1.56 trillion deficit.  At the same time, Paul Volcker was defending legislation to limit proprietary trading by banks.  Somehow, someone got the idea that proprietary trading caused the credit crisis.  Back when professional proprietary equity trading was taking off (prop day-trading), it seemed every evil deed within 50 miles of Wall Street was blamed on ‘proprietary trading’, ‘fast money trading’ and ‘day traders.’  I was a prop trader for six years and from what I remember, the people that knew the least about trading always blamed trading, even when it had absolutely nothing to do with trading.  “Deja vu all over again.” (Yogi Berra 1960)

New York spot gold added another $8.30 an ounce (+0.75%, $1,113.90, 4:32 p.m.) after popping up $25 yesterday as the PowerShares DB US Dollar ETF (NYSE: UUP) looks like its recent rally is over.  The UUP lost 0.34% today as it closed below its 200 day exponential moving average and also broke below the uptrend line that has been in effect since January 14th.  Nothing moves straight up or down in the financial markets so, while the UUP’s medium term trend is still up, the short term picture is down.  The UUP closed at $23.27 and the 200 day EMA is at $23.31.  The relevant support levels below are $23.16 (top support) and $22.90 (50 day EMA).

Oil is on fire, literally and figuratively, as a cold winter in the United States has propped prices up and Nymex crude gained $2.64 a barrel (+3.55%, $77.07, 4:32 p.m.) for a second straight very strong day.  Strength was seen in most commodities and the record $1.56 trillion proposed budget deficit cannot be ignored here.  If we start running the dollar printing presses like that budget says, while holding interest rates low to create jobs, some very nasty inflation will not be far behind.

PNC Financial Services Group (NYSE: PNC) is going to offer $3 billion of common stock in order to redeem $7.6 billion of preferred shares it gave the U.S Treasury for a TARP loan.  One by one the private firms are paying the TARP back with interest and click here for a great web page that tracks where all the money went.  From what I can see Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, General Motors, Chrysler and AIG have all our tax money.  I hope Volcker makes sure the auto companies, government sponsored entities (Fannie and Freddie) and insurance companies are not engaged in proprietary trading to protect us from more economic calamities.

We have MBA Purchase Applications reporting at 7 a.m. tomorrow, the Challenger Job-Cut Report at 7:30 a.m., ADP Unemployment at 8:15 a.m., the ISM Non-Manufacturing Index at 10 a.m. (51.0 expected) and the EIA Petroleum Status Report at 10:30 a.m.  Watch the oil market around that EIA report as the 6% gain in crude in the last 2 days will set oil up for a plunge if the numbers do not come in bullish.

Selected earnings estimates for Wednesday, February 3, 2010:

AFFX -0.10 after the close, AKAM 0.43, AMP 0.75 atc, ARW 0.61, AIZ 1.01 atc, BDK 0.77, BRCM 0.44 atc, CSCO 0.35 atc, CMCSA 0.27 before market open, DBD bmo, FNF 0.22 atc, HNT 0.67 bmo, HMC bmo, IP 0.23 bmo, ITT 0.93 bmo, WFR 0.00, MWW -0.01 atc, NOV 0.77 bmo, ONNN 0.14 atc, PFE 0.50, RL 1.01 bmo, RVSN 0.17, R 0.47, SLAB 0.62, SPF 0.02 atc, TMX 0.40 atc, TMO 0.88 bmo, TWX bmo, V 0.91 atc, WWW 0.45 bmo, YUM 0.48 atc.

Wall Street Wrap – Four Dow Jones Stocks Beat Earnings, Market Rises

By Robert Perrego, at 5:37 pm on October 22nd, 2009

Four Dow Jones Industrial Average companies announced Q3 earnings and beat analyst’s estimates today.  The Travelers Companies, Inc. (NYSE: TRV) quadrupled earnings from last year, increased their dividend and announced a stock buyback.  3M Inc. (NYSE: MMM) beat their earnings estimate by 17% AND beat their revenue estimate by 6%.  McDonald’s (NYSE: MCD) beat earnings estimates and saw an increase in revenue year-over-year and AT&T beat earnings estimates by 8% and signed up 3.2 million iPhone users.  That is a lot of good news and the Dow took off for 131.95 points (+1.32%, 10,081.31).

The S&P 500 did not have 10%+ of their index post good news today, so this index was only up 1.06% (+11.51, 1,092.91), which is still a solid day.  The Nasdaq 100, the index that has been relatively strong for the last few days, only gained 0.54% (+9.59, 1,763.15) as the rest of the market played catch up to tech.  AT&T was up $0.16 (+0.61%, $26.10), MMM was up 3.22% (+$2.46, $78.79), MCD up 2% (+$1.17, $59.50) and TRV was up 7.66% (+$3.68, $51.70).

The dollar ETF (NYSE: UUP) popped up off its 14 month low close yesterday, peaked intra-day just before 10 a.m. and then traded off to finish marginally lower.  There was not much movement in oil or gold with Nymex crude dropping 18 cents to $81.25 a barrel (4:13 p.m.) and New York Spot Gold was up $1.10 to $1,059.90 an ounce (4:23 p.m.)

PNC Financial Services Group (NYSE: PNC) announced they will be able to pay their TARP funds back within 15 months.  Funny how this comes out on the day Washington D.C. decides to slash pay to the 7 largest TARP receiving companies by up to 90%.  Senator Charles Schumer (D-NY) is making noise about applying these limits to all TARP receiving companies.  Schumer also is sponsoring legislation to give shareholders more control over the board of director, a so called “shareholders bill of rights”.  If I were a top executive of a TARP firm, right now I would be working late trying to figure out how to get these funds repaid.  If I was not doing that, or if I was down $165 billion (AIG), I would be calling the corporate recruiters putting my name out there for a job with a non-TARP firm.  The biggest problem with this 90% slash and burn on compensation is first the government gives them all this money and invests in these companies, then they chase all the top talent away.  Citigroup (NYSE: C) no longer has their top trader that netted the firm billions of dollars over the past few years as Washington objected to how much he was getting paid.  “Whoops, there it goes…the talent, that is”

The only economic report due tomorrow is Existing Home Sales at 10 a.m. with 5.35M expected.

Earnings of note Friday:  (DOV, 0.48), (EXC 0.96), (FO, 0.61), (HON 0.72), (IR 0.61), (MSFT 0.32), SLB (0.63), (WHR 0.77),