Saturday, November 26, 2005

Market Week in Review

S&P 500 1,268.25 +2.05%*

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Click here for the Weekly Wrap by Briefing.com.

BOTTOM LINE: Overall, last week's market performance was positive considering recent gains and holiday-shortened trading. The advance/decline line rose, most sectors gained and volume was about average on the week. Measures of investor anxiety were mixed. The average 30-year mortgage rate declined for the first time in 13 weeks, falling to 6.28%. This is 107 basis points above all-time lows set in June 2003. Mortgage rates will likely head modestly lower over the intermediate-term. Moreover, the benchmark 10-year T-note yield fell 7 basis points on the week as inflation fears continue to diminish and optimism increased for a Fed “pause” after traders viewed the Nov. 1 Fed minutes. Small-caps and cyclicals continued to outperform on increasing optimism over the health of the US economy. The US dollar rose slightly on the week even as increasing expectations of a European Central Bank rate hike and a US Fed “pause” should have pressured the currency. As well, gold rose again on continuing international diversification out of energy and the euro and into the precious metal. In my opinion, the rise in gold is not a result of increasing inflation fears. Unleaded Gas futures continued their recent collapse and are 50% below September highs even as refinery utilization still remains below normal as a result of the hurricanes. Natural gas supplies decreased slightly this week even as a substantial amount of daily Gulf of Mexico production remains shut-in. Natural Gas has now dropped 24% from recent highs. I continue to believe global energy demand destruction and a substantial increase in supplies into 2006 will continue pushing energy prices substantially lower over the intermediate-term. The S&P 500 is closing in on my mid-year prediction of a double-digit gain. The index is currently up 6.4% for the year.

*5-day % Change

Friday, November 25, 2005

Weekly Scoreboard*

Indices
S&P 500 1,268.25 +2.05%
DJIA 10,931.62 +1.97%
NASDAQ 2,263.01 +1.92%
Russell 2000 683.58 +2.46%
DJ Wilshire 5000 12,675.34 +2.09%
S&P Equity Long/Short Index 1,081.61 +1.37%
S&P Barra Growth 606.42 +1.84%
S&P Barra Value 657.45 +2.24%
Morgan Stanley Consumer 595.64 +.46%
Morgan Stanley Cyclical 776.42 +2.46%
Morgan Stanley Technology 536.06 +2.05%
Transports 4,179.14 +2.37%
Utilities 404.01 +1.63%
S&P 500 Cum A/D Line 8,423.00 +13.61%
Bloomberg Crude Oil % Bulls 34.0 -23.84%
Put/Call .89 +25.35%
NYSE Arms .89 +32.84%
Volatility(VIX) 10.88 -3.29%
ISE Sentiment 321.00 +76.37%
AAII % Bulls N/A
US Dollar 92.04 +.17%
CRB 314.67 +.47%

Futures Spot Prices
Crude Oil 58.71 +.53%
Unleaded Gasoline 145.76 -1.58%
Natural Gas 11.62 -5.76%
Heating Oil 168.92 -2.07%
Gold 492.90 +2.95%
Base Metals 144.16 +2.09%
Copper 185.35 -1.09%
10-year US Treasury Yield 4.42% -1.56%
Average 30-year Mortgage Rate 6.28% -1.26%

Leading Sectors
Oil Service +5.07%
Steel +4.35%
Computer Hardware +4.03%

Lagging Sectors
Computer Services -.77%
Software -1.27%
Airlines -3.79%

One-Week High-Volume Gainers
One-Week High-Volume Losers

*5-Day % Change

***Alert***

The exchanges close at 1 pm EST today. I will post the Weekly Scoreboard later in the afternoon.

Today's Headlines

Bloomberg:
- High-yield, high-risk debt may reward investors in 2006 with returns of 8%, or five times higher than this year, according to John Lonski, chief economist at Moody’s Investors Services.
- The US dollar is rising against the yen after Japan’s Finance Minister Tanigaki said mild deflation “still persists” in the world’s second-biggest economy and the central bank must cooperate with the government to end a seven-year bout of falling prices.
- Taser International said the Nasdaq Stock Market may stop trading its shares because the company has failed to file a quarterly report with the SEC.
- US Treasuries are rising on speculation the Fed may signal it is nearing the end of a series of interest-rate increases on signs inflation remains contained.

Wall Street Journal:
- Tribune’s Chicago Tribune and the Los Angeles Times newspapers may reduce the number of stocks and mutual-funds they list to cut costs.
- Louisiana’s levees may have sprung leaks in countless locations during Hurricane Katrina in addition to the three main breaches, citing engineers and a study by the National Science Foundation.

Chicago Tribune:
- DECT Corp., a Japanese investment group, plans to buy Chicago’s 181 West Madison tower for about $307 million.

SparkSpread:
- Lehman Brothers Holdings hired former Goldman Sachs Group and Amerada Hess oil trader in London as part of an effort to expand into European energy trading.

Detroit Free Press:
- GM CEO Wagoner said the automaker is selling more vehicles in other countries than in the US for the first time.

Business Week:
- Krispy Kreme Doughnuts is looking to build smaller 1,500- to 2,000-square-foot stores that are closer to the size of a traditional doughnut-chain shop, citing CEO Cooper.

Economic Releases

- None of note

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