Tuesday, January 11, 2005

Mid-day Report

S&P 500 1,184.62 -.47%
NASDAQ 2,081.24 -.75%


Leading Sectors
Broadcasting +.29%
HMOs +.24%
Energy +.21%

Lagging Sectors
Biotech -1.63%
Iron/Steel -1.97%
Semis -2.37%

Other
Crude Oil 45.65 +.71%
Natural Gas 6.05 -1.85%
Gold 422.30 +.62%
Base Metals 120.49 +1.29%
U.S. Dollar 82.97 -.46%
10-Yr. T-note Yield 4.24% -.55%
VIX 13.21 -.15%
Put/Call .90 +16.88%
NYSE Arms 1.87 +96.84%
ISE Sentiment 218.00 +36.25%

Market Movers

Economic Data
None of note.

Recommendations
-Goldman Sachs: Reiterated Outperform on MCK, GILD and UTX. Reiterated Underperform on UTX.
-Banc of America: Downgraded CHIR, target $30, and REGN, target $4, to Sell. Rated APH Buy, target $41.
-UBS: Cut AMD to Reduce, target $12. Rated DRL Buy, target $60.
-Legg Mason: Raised AT to Buy, target $65.
-CSFB: Raised DF to Outperform, target $37.
-Morgan Stanley: Cut HPQ to Sell.
-Raymond James: Raised SLNK to Strong Buy, target $21.
-Thomas Weisel: Raised DVA to Outperform. Raised RCI to Outperform.
-Deutsche Bank: Raised ROK to Buy, target $55.
-Merrill Lynch: Raised NTAP to Buy, target $40. Raised GCT to Buy, target $14.50.
-JP Morgan: Cut AWA to Underweight.

Mid-day News
U.S. stocks are lower mid-day on weakness in technology shares and continued profit-taking in small-caps. About 43% of individuals with investable assets of more than $10 million lack a will, the Wall Street Journal reported, citing a study of 792 affluent Americans. Ameritrade Holding is offering a basic trading program for $5, about half its regular fee, Dow Jones Newswires reported. The discovery of oil in an area of the Gulf of Mexico controlled by Cuba could help Fidel Castro’s government as it tries to use hard currency for more than buying oil from abroad, the NY Times reported. Shares of Apollo Investment Corp.(AINV), which buys loans, debt and stock in private companies, have risen 11% this year as the company takes advantage of parent Apollo Advisors, the NY Daily News reported. Phelps Dodge Corp. temporarily shut a copper-rod facility in Norwich, Connecticut, after a fire at the plant, American Metal Market reported. President Bush has picked federal appeals court judge Michael Chertoff to be the new secretary of the US Homeland Security Department, the AP reported. Vail Resorts has collected about $50 million in deposits from about 500 buyers interested in 52 condominiums planned for construction at Vail Mountain, the Denver Post reported. The US Supreme Court let a circuit court decision stand that will permit victims of a 1999 shooting at a Jewish community center in California to sue the manufacturers of the perpetrator’s guns, the LA Times reported. Canada has found its third case of mad cow disease, Reuters reported. Nortel Networks completed a restatement of results from 2001 to 2003 and said 12 executives will repay the company about $8.6 million in bonuses they got based on the incorrect figures, Bloomberg said. The 12 South Asian nations hit by the Dec. 26 earthquake and tsunami have enough food to meet emergency needs of an estimated two million people, the UN said. Israeli Prime Minister Sharon spoke today by telephone with Mahmoud Abbas, the newly elected Palestinian Authority president, reviving a dialogue between Israelis and Palestinians that broke down in summer 2003, Bloomberg said. Relief efforts are successfully preventing outbreaks of disease in the aftermath of last month’s Asian tsunami disaster, Bloomberg reported. Harvard Management, which manages $22.6 billion for Harvard University, said CEO Meyer will leave the company and form a private investment firm, Bloomberg reported. The storms battering California have dumped more than 8 feet of snow on the Sierra Nevada since the weekend, the most to fall on the mountains in almost 90 years, closing highways and increasing fears of an avalanche, Bloomberg said. Health spending in the US rose at the slowest rate in seven years in 2003, Bloomberg reported. Apple Computer CEO Jobs introduced the first Macintosh computer priced under $500 in the machine’s 21-year history to expand sales of the line, Bloomberg said. The NYSE received a dual blow as seat prices dropped below $1 million and American International Group, one of its biggest companies, said it will also list its shares on an all-electronic market, Bloomberg reported.

Bottom Line: The Portfolio is slightly lower mid-day as losses in my networking, retail and internet longs are more than offsetting gains in my steel and auto parts shorts. I exited a few longs this morning, bringing the Portfolio back to 50% net long. The tone of the market is poor again today as the advance/decline line is weak and the major indices break down through their recent trading range. Steel stocks are underperforming and I expect this to continue in the intermediate-term. The market’s reaction to Intel’s report after the close will tell a lot about psychology. After recent declines, semis should at least bounce on this report. If not, further losses for the major indices should be expected. US stocks will likely trade mixed-to-weaker into the close.

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