Monday, August 01, 2005

Construction Spending Slows Temporarily, Manufacturing Jumps, Pending Home Sales High

- Construction Spending for June fell .3% versus estimates of a .7% increase and a 1.7% decline in May.
- ISM Manufacturing for July rose to 56.6 versus estimates of 54.5 and a reading of 53.8 in June.
- ISM Prices Paid for July fell to 48.5 versus estimates of 52.5 and a reading of 50.5 in June.
- Pending Home Sales for June rose .6% versus estimates of a .8% increase and a 1.5% decline in May.

BOTTOM LINE: US construction spending unexpectedly declined for a fourth month as the pace of homebuilding slowed, Bloomberg reported. Construction spending is still 7.9% higher year-over-year. The recently passed highway bill should boost construction spending going forward.

US manufacturing accelerated for a second straight month in July to the best level of the year as gains in both orders and production signaled that factories may add more to economic growth this quarter, Bloomberg reported. The new orders component of index rose to 60.6 versus 57.2 in June. The prices paid component of the index fell to 48.5 last month, the lowest level in 3 years, from 50.5 the prior month. The employment component of the index rose to 53.2 versus 49.9 in June. Finally, the new export orders component rose to 55.9 from 50.4 in June. Overall, a very good manufacturing report and further evidence that manufacturing will now add to economic growth going forward.

Contracts to buy previously owned US homes rebounded to the third highest level ever in June as buyers took advantage of the lowest long-term mortgage rates in 15 months, Bloomberg reported. The index increased .7% in the Midwest, 3.5% in the West, .4% in the South and fell 3.2% in the Northeast. This number bodes well for future home sales. I continue to believe home prices will moderate, not plunge.

Links of Interest

Market Snapshot
Detailed Market Summary
Market Internals
Economic Commentary
Movers & Shakers
IBD New America
NYSE OrderTrac
I-Watch Sector Overview
NYSE Unusual Volume
NASDAQ Unusual Volume
Hot Spots
NASDAQ 100 Heatmap
DJIA Quick Charts
Chart Toppers
Option Dragon
Real-time Intraday Chart/Quote

Monday Watch

Weekend Headlines
Bloomberg:
- The S&P's 500 Index staged its biggest monthly rally this year as second-quarter earnings from companies such as IBM exceeded estimates.
- Wal-Mart Stores said sales at its US stores open at least a year rose about 4.4% in July, the second-highest monthly gain this year.
- The Philadelphia School District, the US's seventh-largest, will become the nation's first to require the study of African-American history, over the objections form critics, including Pennsylvania's most-powerful legislator.
- President Bush, saying he plans to promote the economic progress the US is making, praised the Republican-led Congress for approving energy, trade and highway legislation.
- Take-Two Interactive Software, the third-biggest US video-game maker, said Australia banned sales of the company's "Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas" game because it contains hidden sexual content.
- SAC Capital Advisors LLC, a hedge fund run by Steven A. Cohen, purchased a 5.7% stake in Northwest Airlines.
- Medtronic said it won European approval to sell its Endeavor stent, making it the third player in the $5 billion worldwide market for the drug-coated devices.
- Crude oil is rising in NY to a more than three-week high on concern supply will be disrupted after Iran said it may resume uranium processing and BP Plc cut output at its Texas City refinery.

Barron's:
- Martin Barnes, an economist at Montreal's BCA Research, said he expects low inflation because of little evidence of higher prices globally, as well as greater competition holding down US prices.

New York Times:
- General Electric's board gave executives approval to proceed with talks to buy DreamWorks SKG.
- The US Supreme Court ruing that held local governments have broad powers to take over private property has forced many states to begin weighing changes or constitutional amendments.
- The US Congress gave states the right to impose certain restrictions on predatory towing by truck drivers under the highway bill passed July 29.
- Microsoft is meeting chairman Bill Gates' goal, announced a year ago, of increasing applications for new patents by 50% to 3,000 a year.
- Stocks of utility companies have doubles from the lows hit in October 2002, outpacing the rest of the US stock market as the sector underwent its biggest rally since WWII.
- The Iraq constitution committee agreed to finish drafting the charter by the original deadline of August 15.

Boston Globe:
- The US Dept. of Justice sued the city of Boston for interfering with the voting rights of Hispanic and Asian-Americans with limited English skills.

San Francisco Chronicle:
- Home Depot won approval for its first store in San Francisco after a 10-year battle.

Washington Post:
- US retailers are expanding their efforts to thwart shoplifters with new tracking software, security displays and hangers that lock to jackets or suits.
- Daniel Yergin, of well-respected Cambridge Energy Research, wrote that there will be a large, unprecedented buildup of oil supply during the next few years as capacity rises 20%.

Newsweek:
- The US military may reduce the number of American troops in Iraq to about 80,000 by mid-2006, and cut the number back to 40,000 to 60,000 by the end of next year, citing unidentified Pentagon officials.

Financial Times:
- The novelty of buying ring tones for mobile phones is wearing off in Europe and the US, citing industry analysts.
- The US is reviewing its anti-terror policy and collaborating with the UK and France to liaise with moderate Muslim groups in the fight against extremism.

London-based Times:
- A group of British Muslims with links to those who carried out the July 7 bombings in London may be planning a third attack on the city's transport system.

Observer:
- The world advertising market is slowing more rapidly than expected, citing data published by ZenithOptimedia.

AFP:
- Ousted Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein was involved in a fistfight with an unidentified man who attacked him as he left a Baghdad courtroom on Thursday.

Commercial Times:
- Benq Corp. expects shipments of liquid-crystal display monitors to rise as much as 43% this year from 2004.

Xinhua News Agency:
- China's residential property sales growth is likely to slow to around 15% in the second half from 37.3% during January and February as buyers wait for prices and fees to fall.

Middle East Economic Digest:
- The UAE is planning to raise oil production capacity at its onshore Bab field by two-thirds to 250,000 a day.

Weekend Recommendations
Bulls and Bears:
- Had guests that were positive on FDG, GP, DELL, PTR, CMCSA, DCX, AVP, mixed on DE, TGT, BGP and negative on SHLD.

Forbes on Fox:
- Had guests that were positive on MOT, PNRA, ABT, IR and mixed on SONC, WYE.

Cashin' In:
- Had guests that were positive on AHL, SINA and CYD.

Cavuto on Business:
- Had guests that were positive on SCI, DGX, CSCO, QCOM, INTC, MOT and mixed on STRA.

Barron's:
- Had positive comments on IR.
- Had negative comments on HANS and TGT.

Goldman Sachs:
- Reiterated Outperform on BHI, COH and CCU.

Night Trading
Asian indices are unch. to +.50% on average.
S&P 500 indicated +.14%.
NASDAQ 100 indicated +.28%.

Morning Preview
US AM Market Call
NASDAQ 100 Pre-Market Indicator/Heat Map
Pre-market Commentary
Before the Bell CNBC Video(bottom right)
Global Commentary
Asian Indices
European Indices
Top 20 Business Stories
In Play
Bond Ticker
Daily Stock Events
Macro Calls
Rasmussen Consumer/Investor Daily Indices
CNBC Guest Schedule

Earnings of Note
Company/Estimate
CECO/.47
DRL/.43
EOP/-.17
GT/.20
HUM/.51
IVX/.20
MVSN/.16
MXIM/.37
PG/.55
TSN/.37

Upcoming Splits
SUN 2-for-1

Economic Releases
10:00 am EST
- Construction Spending for June is estimated to rise .7% versus a .9% decline in May.
- ISM Manufacturing for July is estimated to rise to 54.5 versus a reading of 53.8 in June.
- ISM Prices Paid for July is estimated to rise to 52.3 versus a reading of 50.5 in June.
- Pending Home Sales for June are estimated to rise .8% versus a 2.0% decline in May.

BOTTOM LINE: Asian Indices are mostly higher on optimism over recent US economic reports. I expect US stocks to open modestly higher after gains in Asia. The Portfolio is 100% net long heading into the week.

Sunday, July 31, 2005

Weekly Outlook

There are several important economic reports and some significant corporate earnings reports scheduled for release this week.

Economic reports for the week include:

Mon. - ISM Manufacturing, ISM Prices Paid, Pending Home Sales
Tues. - Personal Income, Personal Spending, PCE Deflator, Factory Orders, Total Vehicle Sales
Wed. - ISM Non-Manufacturing
Thur. - Initial Jobless Claims
Fri. - Unemployment Rate, Average Hourly Earnings, Change in Non-farm Payrolls, Consumer Credit

A few of the more noteworthy companies that release quarterly earnings this week are:

Mon. - Career Education(CECO), Goodyear Tire(GT), Proctor & Gamble(PG), Tyson Foods(TSN)
Tues. - Coach Inc.(COH), Comcast Corp(CMCSA), Emerson Electric(EMR), IAC/InterActiveCorp.(IACI), Sirius Satellite(SIRI), Transocean Inc.(RIG), Tyco International(TYC)
Wed. - CVS Corp.(CVS), Duke Energy(DUK), Electronic Data Systems(EDS), Time Warner(TWX)
Thur. - Gillette(G), Harrah's Entertainment(HET), Univision Communications(UVN)
Fri. - Cardinal Health(CAH), Nvidia Corp.(NVDA)

Other events that have market-moving potential this week include:

Mon. - RBC Capital Tech Conference
Tue. - RBC Capital Tech Conference, GM/F/DCX Sales Calls
Wed. - CSFB Electrical Equipment Conference, RBC Tech Conference
Thur. - CSFB Electrical Equipment Conference, RBC Tech Conference
Fri. - CSFB Electrical Equipment Conference

BOTTOM LINE: I expect US stocks to finish the week mixed as rising long-term rates and energy prices offset strong economic reports, positive earnings releases and short-covering. I continue to believe stocks are in a healthy period of consolidation before mounting another push higher. My trading indicators are still giving bullish signals and the Portfolio is 100% net long heading into the week.

Intermediate-Term Outlook

I originally wrote this post for The Street.com's Street Insight 2 weeks ago. I usually post 10-12 times a day on The Long/Short Trader inside of Street Insight. To try a free trial or subscribe click here.

Editor's Picks
7/19/2005 1:19 PM EDT

The Second-Half Bull Run Has Begun

Looking for 10%-Plus by Year-End
Since my last intermediate-term outlook, the S&P 500 has returned about 4.5%; 3.13 percentage points of this has occurred since June 30.

I said that I expected much better performance by the major averages in the second half of the year based on slowing but stable growth, lower inflation expectations, a stable dollar, declining commodity prices, reasonable valuations and excessive pessimism. I continue to hold these views.

Europe and Asia Will Pressure U.S. Growth
Growth in Europe, already near stagnation at around 1.0%, will likely continue to slow or turn negative as a result of the London bombings and political turmoil in the region. Europe's problems run deep and a quick solution is not forthcoming. However, political developments in Germany are encouraging.

As well, numerous signs abound of slowing Chinese growth. Even a modest decline in China's growth rate would send ripples throughout Asia and, therefore, the world. Almost every leading indicator in China is pointing to slowing growth. Demand growth for commodities from the country is plunging from last year's brisk levels. Excess capacity has been generated in China in numerous sectors, which will likely result in a return of deflation worries in the region.

Decelerating inflation and lower prices for oil imports should help boost U.S. GDP growth in the near term. While economic growth has picked-up recently from average rates to around 3.7%-4.0%, weakening global economies will likely send U.S. GDP growth back to around 3.0% early next year.

Inflation Set to Decline Further
Rising commodity prices have been the largest source of inflationary pressures. The CRB Index rose about 77.0% from lows set in early 1999 through March 2005 highs. Specifically, crude oil prices have risen about 465% since lows set during the Asian crisis of 1998 to the highs of recent weeks. This spurred a cyclical upturn in U.S. inflation, which was modest by historic standards. However, as I surmised here, I believe the secular trend of disinflation remains intact and is beginning to reassert itself.

A Cyclical Bear for Commodities?
Declining global demand, excess supply created to satisfy emerging economies' booming growth of recent years and a firmer U.S. dollar will likely push the CRB into, at the very least, a cyclical bear market. I continue to believe oil prices will collapse during the second half of the year to around $35-$40 per barrel.

Recently, the CRB has had a very high correlation with measures of inflation. As well, a number of global economies have been big beneficiaries of the commodities boom. A cyclical commodity bear would disproportionately affect the economies of these nations, further damping global growth.

Unit Labor Costs Should Remain in Check
Disinflationary forces, as a result of the 90s bubble, are still impacting the tech, biotech, airline, retail, auto, telecom, broadcasting and financial sectors. Capacity utilization at 80.0% is still only back to average levels.

Globalization, technological innovation, outsourcing, immigration and excessive hiring during the 90s continue to result in relatively mild unit labor cost increases compared to past expansions. Finally, U.S. job growth will likely return to more sluggish levels by early next year, thus resulting in a moderation of recent unit labor cost increases, which will further diminish inflationary concerns.

U.S. Dollar Will Remain Firm
The negative effects that oil has had on the U.S. economy are understated in my opinion. Oil has hurt the consumer to an extent, however, other factors such as an improving labor market, soaring home values, low long-term interest rates and rising stock prices have mitigated its negative effects.

Obviously, the significant decline in oil that I foresee would boost consumer spending and sentiment. However, it would also help shrink the U.S. budget and trade deficits, thus spurring further gains in the dollar. While the budget deficit would likely continue improving meaningfully under this scenario, the trade deficit will only improve marginally until reforms accelerate and growth improves in foreign nations.

Also, the recent political setbacks for the European Union are significant and ramifications underestimated. I expect the European Central Bank to cut interest rates over the coming months, notwithstanding comments by bankers suggesting otherwise. Recent global central bank diversification into the euro currency will likely subside. Finally, the relative health of the U.S. economy compared to other industrialized nations will become even more pronounced, thus further boosting demand for U.S. assets and the dollar.

Interest Rates to Remain Relatively Low
I had anticipated the Fed "pausing" after last month's rate hike. However, this appears increasingly unlikely with U.S. economic growth accelerating back to above-average rates. Also, I still suspect the Fed will pause before year-end. I do not believe they are overly concerned about inflation at this point.

Any subsequent rate hikes are likely the result of worries over the U.S. housing market and the belief that they need "ammunition" for the next crisis. However, weak global growth, decelerating U.S. growth, a moderation in home price appreciation, falling commodity prices and subdued unit labor costs will likely prompt a "pause." The 10-year T-note yield will likely rise to around 4.3%-4.4% over the coming months before falling back below 4% by earlier next year.

Goldilocks Returns and the Negativity Bubble Bursts
Recent economic data have been "better-than-Goldilocks" as growth has accelerated to above-average rates while inflation has decelerated. Goldilocks will likely appear in full form early next year, characterized by average economic growth with low inflation. Investors appear to be in the initial stage of anticipating her return.

I believe there has been a negativity bubble (meaning exceptional pessimism relative to reality) in the U.S. that began with the tech sector meltdown in early 2000 and is currently in the initial stages of bursting. The bubble inflated as the Nasdaq collapse brought comparisons of the 1929 crash and its ensuing economic devastation. The Bush/Gore election turmoil, recession, the 9/11 terrorist attacks, corporate scandals, the Iraq war, record-setting hurricanes and other natural disasters helped further inflate the bubble.

The negativity bubble peaked shortly before the Bush/Kerry election when talk of an impending recession, a U.S. dollar collapse, soaring inflation, spiraling twin deficits, a housing collapse, a horrible job market and a consumer meltdown were all the rage. Since the election, the air has been slowly seeping from the bubble. However, high energy prices, continuing negative political rhetoric and talk of an impending bankruptcy at General Motors (GM) had kept it intact.

The historically bitter political rhetoric will clearly not end anytime soon and will likely escalate. However, the problems at GM are now at least temporarily under control and I expect Goldilocks return to provide the catalyst for the temporary death of the negativity bubble.

'Buy All Dips' Returns
After 2000, the prevailing wisdom of the "smart money" crowd was to "sell every rally" as the major indices imploded. From early 2003 through early 2004, a "buy the dips" strategy was the wisest. Then from early 2004 through mid-2005 the "buy every dip and sell every rally" strategy prevailed as the major indices consolidated gains. I believe we have now entered an intermediate-term period that a "buy all dips" strategy will once again outperform.

Has There Been a Short-Selling Mania?
Market-neutral and negatively correlated strategies have seen a historical flood of cash inflows over the last few years as the negativity bubble grew and long-biased strategies languished. Total short sales have risen around 252% since 1999. Public short sales have risen an astounding 776% during this same period.

Many day-trading message boards that used to be filled with tales of the next profitless Internet stock that would soon duplicate the success of Yahoo! (YHOO) or eBay (EBAY) are now filled with newly minted short-sellers talking about $200-per-barrel oil sending the U.S. economy into a depression. There is more money betting against the U.S. market than at any time in our history. I believe many nimble investors are now positioning for a sell-off after recent gains believing the trading range is still intact.

P/E Multiples Expand
A Goldilocks U.S. economy, stronger dollar, weaker overseas economies, increased merger activity and more optimism should allow for P/E multiples, which have been contracting for several years, to expand.

The forward P/E on the S&P 500 is 16.4 vs. a historic average of around 12.0. However, I would argue that in the current environment the market deserves a premium multiple not an average one. Moreover, I expect earnings to exceed relatively pessimistic forward estimates.

Growth Takes the Reins from Value
The growth style has lagged value since 2000; however, I expect this trend to reverse given the environment I foresee. The belief in most circles that the U.S. dollar has only temporarily stabilized will likely result in increased foreign takeovers of U.S. companies for a premium. Moreover, the recent trend of significant capital inflows into funds investing in overseas companies will likely reverse as global growth slows and the dollar remains firm.

U.S. Stocks Should See Substantial Intermediate-Term Gains
I expect cyclical, defense, utility, telecom, commodity, hospital and pharmaceutical stocks to underperform over the intermediate-term and technology, biotechnology, medical, retail, airline, homebuilding, restaurant and financial shares to outperform during this period. As well, small caps will likely continue to remain strong as the dollar stays firm, global growth slows and the popularity of emerging market funds wanes.

U.S. stocks are overbought short term and are due for a period of consolidation. However, I expect at least a double-digit return from current levels in the major indices by year-end as fundamentals remain relatively strong, demand increases for U.S. assets, interest rates remain relatively low, P/E multiples expand and short-covering increases.

Saturday, July 30, 2005

Market Week in Review

S&P 500 1,234.18 +.04%*

Image hosted by Photobucket.com

Click here for the Weekly Wrap by Briefing.com.

BOTTOM LINE: Overall, last week's market performance was modestly positive as stocks consolidated recent gains. With 70% of S&P 500 companies reporting, about 70% have exceeded expectations and earnings are running more than 10% above year-ago levels. The advance/decline line rose, almost every sector gained and volume was about average on the week. Measures of investor anxiety were mostly higher. However, the AAII % Bulls rebounded sharply for the week and is now at above-average levels. Mortgage rates rose again, but are still only 56 basis points away from all-time lows set in June 2003. The benchmark 10-year T-note yield continued to rise on very positive economic reports. Cyclical and technology stocks outperformed on economic optimism and strong earnings reports. Moreover, optimism over the possibility of sweeping telecommunications deregulation boosted the Telecom, Wireless and Networking sectors. Finally, oil rose for the week as multiple refinery fires and a strong US economy heightened fears of a fourth quarter crude supply shortfall.

*5-day % Change