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%

Wall Street Wrap – Proctor and Gamble, E-Trade catch Upgrades

By Robert Perrego, at 5:27 pm on September 18th, 2009

E-Trade Financial Corp. (NSDQ: ETFC) caught an upgrade from Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (NYSE: GS) today and Citigroup Inc. (NYSE: C) upgraded Proctor & Gamble Co. (NYSE: PG) stock and raised its price target to $66 from $54.

E-Trade has been having a solid few weeks as in late August a large debt-for-equity swap caused S&P to upgrade the companies debt.  Two days later, Citadel, E-Trades largest shareholder, canceled plans to sell up to 120 million shares of the company, causing the stock to jump from $1.44 to $1.76 and trade as high as $1.94.  On Monday, Citigroup upgraded E-Trade to buy from hold.  Tuesday, E-Trade reported their August trading volume was up 18.3% from July and up 37% year over year.  It did not take long for more upgrades after that.  Give Citigroup credit for getting out in front of the trading update and today Goldman Sachs not only upgraded E-Trade to a buy, but they recommended selling one of their largest competitors, Charles Schwab Corp. (NSDQ: SCHW).  All in, E-Trade is up 26.8% since the debt for equity swap and was up 8.23% today, adding 14 cents a share and closing at $1.84.

Proctor & Gamble gapped up this morning on their own Citigroup upgrade rising $1.79 today (+3.22%, $57.32).  P&G is a member of the Dow Jones Industrial 30 and approximately each $1 move in a Dow component translates into about 7 points on the index.  The Dow closed up 36.28 points today and P&G chipped in for about 12.5 points, or one third of today’s market move.

The Dow gained 36.28 (+0.37%, 9820.20) and closed above 9,800 for the first time since October 10, 2008.  The S&P 500 rose 2.81 points (+0.26%, 1068.30) while the Nasdaq 100 added 4.15 points (+0.24, 1725.24).

Consumer cyclicals were up 0.92% followed by finance up 0.72%.  Energy fell 0.37% as oil dropped dropped 43 cents a barrel or 0.6% ($71.80, 4:37 p.m.).

New York Spot Gold is still hovering just above the $1,000 watermark after losing $5.90 an ounce today.  The yellow metal was last seen trading $1,006.40 (4:53 p.m.) after trading as high as $1,018.70.  While many may be afraid of buying into gold at this ‘high’ level, the question is whether it is in a consolidation or distribution phase.  As gold has risen to approximately this level multiple times in the past, a break higher from here would provide technical chart support at $1,000, setting up a  move many analysts see to as high as $1,250.

Natural gas had a strong day with the United States Natural Gas ETF (NYSE: UNG) jumping 3.19% (+$0.36, $11.64).  UNG has been in hot water lately as it has traded at a premium to its net asset value as a result of the options and futures strategies the fund employs.  The confusion about how these ETFs affect the actual trading of their commodities and the complicated strategies that are needed to model the price action of the underlying index or commodity, have attracted the eyes of the SEC and CFTC, only making potential investors less likely to buy.  Well, UNG has popped from $9.01 to $11.64 in the past two weeks (29%) so an iron stomach and taking on risk has paid off for anyone that got in recently.

Next Wednesday there is a meeting of the Federal Reserve Open Market Committee with a rate decision announcement at 2:15 p.m.  There is no expectation of a rate raise as most economists agree that the tepid economic recovery should not be subjected to rising rates.  Other than The Fed meeting, we have Jobless Claims and Existing Home Sales on Thursday with Consumer Sentiment, Durable Goods and New Home Sales on Friday.

Have a great weekend.