Portfolio Manager's Commentary on Investing and Trading in the U.S. Financial Markets
Monday, May 31, 2004
Chart of the Week
Bottom Line: Spending on information technology is increasing at the fastest annual rate since the mania of the late 90's. Unlike the bubble period, current spending is from companies with solid balance sheets and real business models. Moreover, corporate IT spending, which is highly correlated to labor growth, should accelerate throughout the year. Researcher Gartner Inc. now expects PC sales growth of 14% in the second quarter, matching their prior projections for all of 2004. A need to replace almost 100 million obsolete PCs this year will also contribute to gains, Gartner said.
Weekly Outlook
There are a number of important economic reports and only a few significant corporate earnings reports scheduled for release this week. Economic reports this week include Construction Spending, ISM Manufacturing/Prices Paid, Auto Sales, Non-farm Productivity, Unit Labor Costs, Initial Jobless Claims, Factory Orders, ISM Non-Manufacturing, Unemployment Rate, Average Hourly Earnings, Change in Non-farm Payrolls and Average Weekly Hours. The ISM reports, Productivity, Unit Labor Costs, and Change in Non-farm Payrolls all have market-moving potential.
Hovnanian Enterprises(HOV), Albertson's(ABS), Neiman-Marcus(NMG/A), Comverse Technology(CMVT) and Mandalay Resort Group(MBG) are some of the more important companies that release quarterly earnings this week. There are also a few other events that have market-moving potential. The Citi SmithBarney Semiconductor Conference, ASCO 2004 Annual meeting, American Society of Clinical Oncology Conference, Flextronics(FLEX) Mid-quarter Update and Intel(INTC) Mid-quarter Update could all impact trading this week.
Bottom Line: I expect U.S. stocks to rise this week on strong economic reports, declining energy prices and stabilizing interest rates. As well, positive news from mid-quarter updates and several conferences should push stocks higher. The relatively high Put/Call and ARMS readings at the end of last week and fall in the AAII % Bulls also bode well for stocks this week. Recent price action in the major U.S. indices is very similar to that seen right after the lows in March 03. Breadth is very good, small-caps are outperforming and tech is recovering. I expect biotechnology and technology shares to outperform this week, while homebuilders and retailers lag. My short-term trading indicators all still giving buy signals and the Portfolio is 125% net long heading into the week.
Hovnanian Enterprises(HOV), Albertson's(ABS), Neiman-Marcus(NMG/A), Comverse Technology(CMVT) and Mandalay Resort Group(MBG) are some of the more important companies that release quarterly earnings this week. There are also a few other events that have market-moving potential. The Citi SmithBarney Semiconductor Conference, ASCO 2004 Annual meeting, American Society of Clinical Oncology Conference, Flextronics(FLEX) Mid-quarter Update and Intel(INTC) Mid-quarter Update could all impact trading this week.
Bottom Line: I expect U.S. stocks to rise this week on strong economic reports, declining energy prices and stabilizing interest rates. As well, positive news from mid-quarter updates and several conferences should push stocks higher. The relatively high Put/Call and ARMS readings at the end of last week and fall in the AAII % Bulls also bode well for stocks this week. Recent price action in the major U.S. indices is very similar to that seen right after the lows in March 03. Breadth is very good, small-caps are outperforming and tech is recovering. I expect biotechnology and technology shares to outperform this week, while homebuilders and retailers lag. My short-term trading indicators all still giving buy signals and the Portfolio is 125% net long heading into the week.
Sunday, May 30, 2004
Market Week in Review
S&P 500 1,120.68 +2.48%
Technology and interest rate-sensitive shares led U.S. stocks to their best performance in almost two months last week on falling energy prices, declining interest rates, strong economic reports and an improving situation in Iraq. Even a government warning that al-Qaeda or other terror groups are in the U.S. preparing to launch a major attack this summer could not push equity prices lower. Breadth was much improved as almost every sector rose last week. Stocks were also buoyed mid-week by a government report that showed the biggest increase in corporate profits in two decades and faster first-quarter U.S. economic growth than earlier reported. Finally, global economic optimism got a boost from Asia as Japanese household spending rose a seasonally adjusted 9.3% from March, the largest increase since the survey began in 1975. Job growth sparked consumer spending, which makes up more than half the Japanese economy, Bloomberg reported.
There were several other developments with positive implications for U.S. stocks last week. Medtronic, the world's largest maker of devices that regulate heartbeats, said 4th quarter revenue rose 24%, beating expectations. Swift Transportation, a $1.5 billion trucking company, raised 2nd quarter guidance substantially as a result of getting better trucking rates and strong economic growth. Comcast, the largest American cable company, said it plans to offer digital phone service using VOIP technology to almost all its customers by the end of 2006. Tech Data, a $2.3 billion distributor of technology products, beat first quarter estimates substantially and raised second quarter guidance, citing strength in Europe. Lastly, Novellus, a large semiconductor equipment maker, raised its forecasts for second quarter orders, profits and sales.
Bottom Line: The key takeaway from last week was that investor psychology has changed for the positive. Psychology has been the main culprit weighing on U.S. stocks as the underlying fundamentals are excellent. Stocks are cheaper now than in 1987 and 1994, years preceding major bull runs. U.S. stock valuations are down 40%, and falling, from their peaks during the bubble of the late 90's. During that period most stocks were declining while a few were soaring. Currently, most stocks are rising while only a few are falling. Corporate accounting is much more conservative and trustworthy than during the 90's. As well, inflation and interest rates are now significantly lower than during those time periods. In 1987 the 10-yr T-note yielded close to 10%, in 1994 it yielded 8% and today the yield is 4.65%. Corporate profits are at all-time highs and are accelerating at the fastest pace on record. As profits soar, companies are boosting production and hiring more workers. U.S. economic growth is the best since the early 80's. American's net worth is at all-time highs as the housing market will hit another record high this year, notwithstanding higher rates and energy prices. All these many positives have been forgotten as the mainstream press focuses intensely on the few negatives. However, with interest rates falling, energy prices declining and Iraq improving it will be much harder for the media to constantly make the negative argument for the Bears.
Technology and interest rate-sensitive shares led U.S. stocks to their best performance in almost two months last week on falling energy prices, declining interest rates, strong economic reports and an improving situation in Iraq. Even a government warning that al-Qaeda or other terror groups are in the U.S. preparing to launch a major attack this summer could not push equity prices lower. Breadth was much improved as almost every sector rose last week. Stocks were also buoyed mid-week by a government report that showed the biggest increase in corporate profits in two decades and faster first-quarter U.S. economic growth than earlier reported. Finally, global economic optimism got a boost from Asia as Japanese household spending rose a seasonally adjusted 9.3% from March, the largest increase since the survey began in 1975. Job growth sparked consumer spending, which makes up more than half the Japanese economy, Bloomberg reported.
There were several other developments with positive implications for U.S. stocks last week. Medtronic, the world's largest maker of devices that regulate heartbeats, said 4th quarter revenue rose 24%, beating expectations. Swift Transportation, a $1.5 billion trucking company, raised 2nd quarter guidance substantially as a result of getting better trucking rates and strong economic growth. Comcast, the largest American cable company, said it plans to offer digital phone service using VOIP technology to almost all its customers by the end of 2006. Tech Data, a $2.3 billion distributor of technology products, beat first quarter estimates substantially and raised second quarter guidance, citing strength in Europe. Lastly, Novellus, a large semiconductor equipment maker, raised its forecasts for second quarter orders, profits and sales.
Bottom Line: The key takeaway from last week was that investor psychology has changed for the positive. Psychology has been the main culprit weighing on U.S. stocks as the underlying fundamentals are excellent. Stocks are cheaper now than in 1987 and 1994, years preceding major bull runs. U.S. stock valuations are down 40%, and falling, from their peaks during the bubble of the late 90's. During that period most stocks were declining while a few were soaring. Currently, most stocks are rising while only a few are falling. Corporate accounting is much more conservative and trustworthy than during the 90's. As well, inflation and interest rates are now significantly lower than during those time periods. In 1987 the 10-yr T-note yielded close to 10%, in 1994 it yielded 8% and today the yield is 4.65%. Corporate profits are at all-time highs and are accelerating at the fastest pace on record. As profits soar, companies are boosting production and hiring more workers. U.S. economic growth is the best since the early 80's. American's net worth is at all-time highs as the housing market will hit another record high this year, notwithstanding higher rates and energy prices. All these many positives have been forgotten as the mainstream press focuses intensely on the few negatives. However, with interest rates falling, energy prices declining and Iraq improving it will be much harder for the media to constantly make the negative argument for the Bears.
Economic Week in Review
ECRI Weekly Leading Index 133.80 unch.
U.S. Existing Home Sales rose 2.5% in April to 6.64 million houses at an annual rate, the second-highest level on record and above estimates of 6.46 million. Increased hiring and tax cuts has given consumers more money to buy while forecasts for higher interest rates may be encouraging some people to purchase homes now, Bloomberg reported. "Continued vigorous job gains and accompanying income growth are likely to partially offset the impact of the run-up in borrowing costs," said Stephen Stanley, chief economist at RBS Greenwich Capital.
The Conference Board's Consumer Confidence Index rose to 93.2 in May versus expectations of 94.0 and a reading of 93.0 in April. The final Univ. of Mich. Consumer Confidence reading for May was 90.2 versus expectations of 94.2 and a prior forecast of 94.2. The constant barrage of negative headlines on Iraq and rising gasoline prices is taking its toll on the consumer's psyche, Bloomberg said. While the strongest job gains since the stock market bubble burst in 2000 are barely reported, they have a much greater affect on consumer spending. If the recent increase in oil costs are maintained this year it will subtract about $35 billion from after-tax income. However, a 200,000 increase in payrolls a month on average for the remainder of the year will boost incomes by $71 billion, Bloomberg reported. Consumer spending is currently projected to rise 3.9% this year, the most since 2000. This improvement will contribute to a 4.6% increase in U.S. economic growth, the best performance in two decades, according to the median forecast.
Durable Goods Orders for April fell 2.9% versus estimates of a .9% decline and a 5.7% rise in March. A drop in bookings for commercial aircraft and automobiles led the decline. "The two previous months were huge increases, so you can't be surprised if it gives back some of those gains," Ken Mayland, president of Clear View Economics said. The two-month gain before April was the biggest since record-keeping began in 1992, Bloomberg reported. Shipments of personal computers will probably rise 14% in the second quarter, matching the projected increase for all of 2004, researcher Gartner Inc. said. A need to replace almost 100 million obsolete PCs this year will contribute to the gains, Bloomberg said.
New Home Sales for April fell to 1093K versus estimates of 1200K and a level of 1239K in March. Last month's sales pace was the slowest since November and follows an all-time record in March. The median sale price of a new home climbed to $221,200 from $203,300. California home prices had their second-biggest increase in 26 years in April as the median price rose 24.6% from a year earlier, the state Association of Realtors said. "I don't think the case is there yet that housing is weakening significantly. This could just be payback for March's record high," said James O'Sullivan, senior economist at UBS Securities. Even with the April decline, the sales pace so far this year corresponds with another all-time record for new home sales.
The U.S. economy grew at a 4.4% annual pace in the first quarter, faster than estimated last month, but below the most recent estimates of 4.5% growth. Corporate profits jumped 31.6% in the 12 months ended in March, the biggest increase since the first quarter of 1984. Increasing sales and profits have given companies the confidence to ramp up production and increase hiring, Bloomberg reported. "We have moved clearly into a self-sustaining expansion," said Peter Kretzmer, a senior economist at Banc of America Securities. Moreover, the report showed the U.S. economy expanded 5% during the 12 months ended in March, the most since 1984. As well, nominal GDP rose 7.2% during this period. Rising oil prices don't threaten the U.S. economy enough to make the IMF change its forecast of 4.6% growth this year, the most since 1984, Bloomberg reported. Finally, the personal consumption expenditures price index excluding food and energy, Greenspan's favorite inflation gauge, rose only 1.7% in the first quarter.
Personal Income for April rose .6% versus estimates of a .5% gain and a .4% rise in March. Personal Spending in April rose .3% versus estimates of a .2% gain and a .5% rise in March. The rise in American incomes was the most in 3 years, Bloomberg said. "Consumer spending is hanging in there, and it will get help from the pick up in the labor market," said James O'Sullivan, senior economist at UBS Securities. "Inflation is poised to continue to rise at a measured pace, which is also likely to be the speed at which the Fed moves to raise interest rates," said Joseph LaVorgna, chief US fixed-income strategist at Deutsche Bank.
Initial Jobless Claims for last week were 344K versus expectations of 335K and 347K the prior week. Continuing claims came in at 2948K versus estimates of 2923K and 2929K the prior week. The four-week moving average of jobless claims came in at 335,500, the lowest since 2000. Chicago-based CPRi, which provides temporary staffing and recruiting for companies including AT&T and General Motors has seen a jump in demand for its services in the past few months, Bloomberg reported.
The Chicago Purchasing Manager report came in at 68.0 in May versus expectations of 62.0 and 63.9 in April. The May reading was the highest since July 1988. A gauge of new orders also showed the highest reading since then. The index of prices paid was the highest since 1995. "Overall, this was a very strong report and suggests we're going to just keep trotting along here," said Kevin Harris, chief economist at Informa Global Markets.
Bottom Line: Overall, last week's data continued to paint a very positive picture of the current state of the U.S. economy. U.S. home sales will definitely slow from their recent record-setting levels to more moderate and sustainable growth. However, I do not think the home market is about to collapse as the underlying fundamentals are far too strong. Good growth is always better than great growth for the long-run health of any market. The media's obsession with negativity definitely seems to be affecting consumer confidence as many positive stories are under-reported or un-reported. However, there is very little empirical evidence of a strong correlation between consumer confidence and spending patterns. The drop in volatile Durable Goods Orders from record-high levels is not of concern at this point. Gartner's recent projection of 14% growth for PCs in the second quarter bodes well for MSFT, INTC, DELL and the tech sector in general. Even with the rise in energy prices and interest rates, the U.S. economy is poised to post its best growth since 1984. Oil would have to double in price to equal the inflation-adjusted levels seen during the Iran hostage crisis. Moreover, the U.S. economy is much less dependent on oil now than in the past. Inflation, while rising, is currently not a significant threat to growth. Consumer spending continues at a healthy pace, while it appears corporate spending is strengthening. The recent acceleration in job growth and wages should offset most of the effects of higher interest rates and gas prices. Finally, evidence continues to mount that the health of U.S. manufacturers is improving significantly for the first time in many years.
U.S. Existing Home Sales rose 2.5% in April to 6.64 million houses at an annual rate, the second-highest level on record and above estimates of 6.46 million. Increased hiring and tax cuts has given consumers more money to buy while forecasts for higher interest rates may be encouraging some people to purchase homes now, Bloomberg reported. "Continued vigorous job gains and accompanying income growth are likely to partially offset the impact of the run-up in borrowing costs," said Stephen Stanley, chief economist at RBS Greenwich Capital.
The Conference Board's Consumer Confidence Index rose to 93.2 in May versus expectations of 94.0 and a reading of 93.0 in April. The final Univ. of Mich. Consumer Confidence reading for May was 90.2 versus expectations of 94.2 and a prior forecast of 94.2. The constant barrage of negative headlines on Iraq and rising gasoline prices is taking its toll on the consumer's psyche, Bloomberg said. While the strongest job gains since the stock market bubble burst in 2000 are barely reported, they have a much greater affect on consumer spending. If the recent increase in oil costs are maintained this year it will subtract about $35 billion from after-tax income. However, a 200,000 increase in payrolls a month on average for the remainder of the year will boost incomes by $71 billion, Bloomberg reported. Consumer spending is currently projected to rise 3.9% this year, the most since 2000. This improvement will contribute to a 4.6% increase in U.S. economic growth, the best performance in two decades, according to the median forecast.
Durable Goods Orders for April fell 2.9% versus estimates of a .9% decline and a 5.7% rise in March. A drop in bookings for commercial aircraft and automobiles led the decline. "The two previous months were huge increases, so you can't be surprised if it gives back some of those gains," Ken Mayland, president of Clear View Economics said. The two-month gain before April was the biggest since record-keeping began in 1992, Bloomberg reported. Shipments of personal computers will probably rise 14% in the second quarter, matching the projected increase for all of 2004, researcher Gartner Inc. said. A need to replace almost 100 million obsolete PCs this year will contribute to the gains, Bloomberg said.
New Home Sales for April fell to 1093K versus estimates of 1200K and a level of 1239K in March. Last month's sales pace was the slowest since November and follows an all-time record in March. The median sale price of a new home climbed to $221,200 from $203,300. California home prices had their second-biggest increase in 26 years in April as the median price rose 24.6% from a year earlier, the state Association of Realtors said. "I don't think the case is there yet that housing is weakening significantly. This could just be payback for March's record high," said James O'Sullivan, senior economist at UBS Securities. Even with the April decline, the sales pace so far this year corresponds with another all-time record for new home sales.
The U.S. economy grew at a 4.4% annual pace in the first quarter, faster than estimated last month, but below the most recent estimates of 4.5% growth. Corporate profits jumped 31.6% in the 12 months ended in March, the biggest increase since the first quarter of 1984. Increasing sales and profits have given companies the confidence to ramp up production and increase hiring, Bloomberg reported. "We have moved clearly into a self-sustaining expansion," said Peter Kretzmer, a senior economist at Banc of America Securities. Moreover, the report showed the U.S. economy expanded 5% during the 12 months ended in March, the most since 1984. As well, nominal GDP rose 7.2% during this period. Rising oil prices don't threaten the U.S. economy enough to make the IMF change its forecast of 4.6% growth this year, the most since 1984, Bloomberg reported. Finally, the personal consumption expenditures price index excluding food and energy, Greenspan's favorite inflation gauge, rose only 1.7% in the first quarter.
Personal Income for April rose .6% versus estimates of a .5% gain and a .4% rise in March. Personal Spending in April rose .3% versus estimates of a .2% gain and a .5% rise in March. The rise in American incomes was the most in 3 years, Bloomberg said. "Consumer spending is hanging in there, and it will get help from the pick up in the labor market," said James O'Sullivan, senior economist at UBS Securities. "Inflation is poised to continue to rise at a measured pace, which is also likely to be the speed at which the Fed moves to raise interest rates," said Joseph LaVorgna, chief US fixed-income strategist at Deutsche Bank.
Initial Jobless Claims for last week were 344K versus expectations of 335K and 347K the prior week. Continuing claims came in at 2948K versus estimates of 2923K and 2929K the prior week. The four-week moving average of jobless claims came in at 335,500, the lowest since 2000. Chicago-based CPRi, which provides temporary staffing and recruiting for companies including AT&T and General Motors has seen a jump in demand for its services in the past few months, Bloomberg reported.
The Chicago Purchasing Manager report came in at 68.0 in May versus expectations of 62.0 and 63.9 in April. The May reading was the highest since July 1988. A gauge of new orders also showed the highest reading since then. The index of prices paid was the highest since 1995. "Overall, this was a very strong report and suggests we're going to just keep trotting along here," said Kevin Harris, chief economist at Informa Global Markets.
Bottom Line: Overall, last week's data continued to paint a very positive picture of the current state of the U.S. economy. U.S. home sales will definitely slow from their recent record-setting levels to more moderate and sustainable growth. However, I do not think the home market is about to collapse as the underlying fundamentals are far too strong. Good growth is always better than great growth for the long-run health of any market. The media's obsession with negativity definitely seems to be affecting consumer confidence as many positive stories are under-reported or un-reported. However, there is very little empirical evidence of a strong correlation between consumer confidence and spending patterns. The drop in volatile Durable Goods Orders from record-high levels is not of concern at this point. Gartner's recent projection of 14% growth for PCs in the second quarter bodes well for MSFT, INTC, DELL and the tech sector in general. Even with the rise in energy prices and interest rates, the U.S. economy is poised to post its best growth since 1984. Oil would have to double in price to equal the inflation-adjusted levels seen during the Iran hostage crisis. Moreover, the U.S. economy is much less dependent on oil now than in the past. Inflation, while rising, is currently not a significant threat to growth. Consumer spending continues at a healthy pace, while it appears corporate spending is strengthening. The recent acceleration in job growth and wages should offset most of the effects of higher interest rates and gas prices. Finally, evidence continues to mount that the health of U.S. manufacturers is improving significantly for the first time in many years.
Saturday, May 29, 2004
Weekly Scoreboard*
Indices
S&P 500 1,120.68 +2.48%
Dow 10,188.45 +2.22%
NASDAQ 1,986.74 +3.90%
Russell 2000 568.28 +4.12%
Wilshire 5000 10,926.27 +2.78%
Volatility(VIX) 15.50 -16.17%
AAII % Bulls 36.11 -1.53%
US Dollar 88.90 -1.92%
CRB 277.25 +2.77%
Futures Spot Prices
Gold 394.90 +2.17%
Crude Oil 39.88 +.07%
Natural Gas 6.44 +.42%
Base Metals 108.81 +3.64%
10-year US Treasury Yield 4.65% -2.31%
Average 30-year Mortgage Rate 6.32% +.32%
Leading Sectors
Disk Drives +8.51%
Homebuilders +8.13%
Nanotechnology +7.05%
Lagging Sectors
Airlines +1.42%
Tobacco -1.06%
Telecom -1.64%
*% Gain or loss for the week
S&P 500 1,120.68 +2.48%
Dow 10,188.45 +2.22%
NASDAQ 1,986.74 +3.90%
Russell 2000 568.28 +4.12%
Wilshire 5000 10,926.27 +2.78%
Volatility(VIX) 15.50 -16.17%
AAII % Bulls 36.11 -1.53%
US Dollar 88.90 -1.92%
CRB 277.25 +2.77%
Futures Spot Prices
Gold 394.90 +2.17%
Crude Oil 39.88 +.07%
Natural Gas 6.44 +.42%
Base Metals 108.81 +3.64%
10-year US Treasury Yield 4.65% -2.31%
Average 30-year Mortgage Rate 6.32% +.32%
Leading Sectors
Disk Drives +8.51%
Homebuilders +8.13%
Nanotechnology +7.05%
Lagging Sectors
Airlines +1.42%
Tobacco -1.06%
Telecom -1.64%
*% Gain or loss for the week
Friday, May 28, 2004
Mid-day Update
S&P 500 1,120.43 -.08%
NASDAQ 1,986.24 +.09%
Leading Sectors
Broadcasting +3.86%
Oil Service +1.75%
Semis +1.55%
Lagging Sectors
Drugs -.68%
Iron/Steel -.99%
Airlines -1.05%
Other
Crude Oil 39.65 +.61%
Natural Gas 6.45 -1.87%
Gold 394.90 -.30%
Base Metals 108.81 +.60%
U.S. Dollar 88.97 +.34%
10-Yr. T-note Yield 4.64% +1.07%
VIX 15.55 +1.77%
Put/Call 1.01 +8.60%
NYSE Arms 1.13 +39.51%
Market Movers
UTSI +8.83% after announcing it will be added to the S&P 400 Index.
NVLS +5.4% after raising 2Q forecast substantially.
DITC +22.5% after beating 4Q estimates and raising 1Q guidance.
CAE +15.82% after beating 1Q estimates substantially.
NAP +11.31% after saying NCC is trying to sell its majority stake in the company.
BCSI -26.3% after missing 4Q estimates and lowering 1Q forecast.
OXM -6.18% after lowering 1Q and 04 forecasts.
ACDO -5.4% on speculation that Medi-Cal reimbursement cuts for blood factor will negatively impact earnings.
Economic Data
Personal Income for April +.6% versus expectations of +.5% and +.4% in March.
Personal Spending for April +.3% versus expectations of +.2% and +.5% in March.
PCE Deflator (Y-O-Y) for April +1.9% versus expectations of +1.8% and +1.5% in March.
U. of Mich. Consumer Confidence Final May reading 90.2 versus estimates of 94.2 and 94.2 prior.
Chicago Purchasing Manager report for May was 68.0 versus estimates of 62.0 and 63.9 in April.
Recommendations
BUD raised to Overweight at Morgan Stanley, target $60. BG rated Outperform at CSFB, target $46. Goldman Sachs reiterated Outperform on AUO, target $26.12. Goldman reiterated Buy on DELL, target $42. Goldman continues to believe there is meaningful upside in newspaper operating margins over the next few quarters, favorites are GCI, TRB and KRI. Goldman said to Buy SRE ahead of analyst meeting on June 2-3. Goldman reiterated Outperform on CDL. Citi SmithBarney reiterated Buy on KRB, target $31. Citi reiterated Buy on CCL, target $52. Citi reiterated Buy on PCG, target $34. Goldman reiterated Underperform on FGP. Legg Mason said SINT should benefit from a LMT win of the $15 billion homeland security contract that should be awarded any day as it is one of LMT's top 4 outsourcers.
Mid-day News
U.S. stocks are quietly mixed mid-day as investors decline to make big bets ahead of the holiday weekend. The Chicago Purchasing Managers' Index rose to a 16-year high in May, Bloomberg said. Consumer Sentiment fell more-than-expected in May as rising gas prices and violence in Iraq dominated headlines, drowning out other very positive developments, Bloomberg reported. Personal Incomes in April rose the most since the stock market bubble burst in 2000, Bloomberg reported. Internet sales of dolls that immortalize political figures such as President Bush and Senator Kerry are boosting sales of action figures in general, the Wall Street Journal reported. U.S. President Bush's planned visit to Rome next week carries "serious threats," Italian Interior Minister Pisanu told Agence France-Presse. Nascar has held preliminary talks with New York City economic development officials on building a speedway on Staten Island, the NY Times reported. The Iraqi Governing Council unanimously endorsed Iyad Allawi to become Iraq's new prime minister, the AP reported. Gillette has signed a 3-year contract with British soccer star David Beckham, the Boston Herald reported. Cable tv networks are expected to beat the seven broadcast networks during the May "sweeps" period and capture a greater share of the audience this season, Broadcasting and Cable reported. EchoStar Communications said yesterday it will add 1,000 full- and part-time jobs in Tulsa, Oklahoma, the Denver Post reported. El Paso said a reorganization in the first quarter cut annual expenses by $40 million to $50 million, helping the company to exceed expectations for cash flow and debt reduction, Bloomberg reported.
BOTTOM LINE: The Portfolio is up slightly today on strength in my semiconductor, telecom equipment and broadcasting long positions. I have not traded today and the Portfolio is still 125% net long. The Chicago Purchasing Manager report was extremely positive. The decline in consumer confidence is a function of the media's intense focus on negativity as there are many positive stories going unreported. I expect consumer confidence to improve throughout the year as employment growth continues, energy prices stabilize, Iraq improves and corporate spending accelerates. I expect U.S. stocks to move slightly higher into the close this afternoon and then resume this week's rally on Tuesday, barring any significant terrorist attack over the holiday weekend.
NASDAQ 1,986.24 +.09%
Leading Sectors
Broadcasting +3.86%
Oil Service +1.75%
Semis +1.55%
Lagging Sectors
Drugs -.68%
Iron/Steel -.99%
Airlines -1.05%
Other
Crude Oil 39.65 +.61%
Natural Gas 6.45 -1.87%
Gold 394.90 -.30%
Base Metals 108.81 +.60%
U.S. Dollar 88.97 +.34%
10-Yr. T-note Yield 4.64% +1.07%
VIX 15.55 +1.77%
Put/Call 1.01 +8.60%
NYSE Arms 1.13 +39.51%
Market Movers
UTSI +8.83% after announcing it will be added to the S&P 400 Index.
NVLS +5.4% after raising 2Q forecast substantially.
DITC +22.5% after beating 4Q estimates and raising 1Q guidance.
CAE +15.82% after beating 1Q estimates substantially.
NAP +11.31% after saying NCC is trying to sell its majority stake in the company.
BCSI -26.3% after missing 4Q estimates and lowering 1Q forecast.
OXM -6.18% after lowering 1Q and 04 forecasts.
ACDO -5.4% on speculation that Medi-Cal reimbursement cuts for blood factor will negatively impact earnings.
Economic Data
Personal Income for April +.6% versus expectations of +.5% and +.4% in March.
Personal Spending for April +.3% versus expectations of +.2% and +.5% in March.
PCE Deflator (Y-O-Y) for April +1.9% versus expectations of +1.8% and +1.5% in March.
U. of Mich. Consumer Confidence Final May reading 90.2 versus estimates of 94.2 and 94.2 prior.
Chicago Purchasing Manager report for May was 68.0 versus estimates of 62.0 and 63.9 in April.
Recommendations
BUD raised to Overweight at Morgan Stanley, target $60. BG rated Outperform at CSFB, target $46. Goldman Sachs reiterated Outperform on AUO, target $26.12. Goldman reiterated Buy on DELL, target $42. Goldman continues to believe there is meaningful upside in newspaper operating margins over the next few quarters, favorites are GCI, TRB and KRI. Goldman said to Buy SRE ahead of analyst meeting on June 2-3. Goldman reiterated Outperform on CDL. Citi SmithBarney reiterated Buy on KRB, target $31. Citi reiterated Buy on CCL, target $52. Citi reiterated Buy on PCG, target $34. Goldman reiterated Underperform on FGP. Legg Mason said SINT should benefit from a LMT win of the $15 billion homeland security contract that should be awarded any day as it is one of LMT's top 4 outsourcers.
Mid-day News
U.S. stocks are quietly mixed mid-day as investors decline to make big bets ahead of the holiday weekend. The Chicago Purchasing Managers' Index rose to a 16-year high in May, Bloomberg said. Consumer Sentiment fell more-than-expected in May as rising gas prices and violence in Iraq dominated headlines, drowning out other very positive developments, Bloomberg reported. Personal Incomes in April rose the most since the stock market bubble burst in 2000, Bloomberg reported. Internet sales of dolls that immortalize political figures such as President Bush and Senator Kerry are boosting sales of action figures in general, the Wall Street Journal reported. U.S. President Bush's planned visit to Rome next week carries "serious threats," Italian Interior Minister Pisanu told Agence France-Presse. Nascar has held preliminary talks with New York City economic development officials on building a speedway on Staten Island, the NY Times reported. The Iraqi Governing Council unanimously endorsed Iyad Allawi to become Iraq's new prime minister, the AP reported. Gillette has signed a 3-year contract with British soccer star David Beckham, the Boston Herald reported. Cable tv networks are expected to beat the seven broadcast networks during the May "sweeps" period and capture a greater share of the audience this season, Broadcasting and Cable reported. EchoStar Communications said yesterday it will add 1,000 full- and part-time jobs in Tulsa, Oklahoma, the Denver Post reported. El Paso said a reorganization in the first quarter cut annual expenses by $40 million to $50 million, helping the company to exceed expectations for cash flow and debt reduction, Bloomberg reported.
BOTTOM LINE: The Portfolio is up slightly today on strength in my semiconductor, telecom equipment and broadcasting long positions. I have not traded today and the Portfolio is still 125% net long. The Chicago Purchasing Manager report was extremely positive. The decline in consumer confidence is a function of the media's intense focus on negativity as there are many positive stories going unreported. I expect consumer confidence to improve throughout the year as employment growth continues, energy prices stabilize, Iraq improves and corporate spending accelerates. I expect U.S. stocks to move slightly higher into the close this afternoon and then resume this week's rally on Tuesday, barring any significant terrorist attack over the holiday weekend.
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