Monday, September 25, 2006

S&P 500 Hits 5-Year High

Indices
S&P 1,326.37 +.88%
DJIA 11,575.81 +.59%
NASDAQ 2,249.07 +1.36%
Russell 2000 727.09 +1.18%
Wilshire 5000 13,231.17 +.86%
S&P Barra Growth 615.61 +.82%
S&P Barra Value 708.70 +.94%
Morgan Stanley Consumer 649.27 +.20%
Morgan Stanley Cyclical 808.39 +.81%
Morgan Stanley Technology 529.21 +1.91%
Transports 4,343.52 +.37%
Utilities 428 .65 +1.40%
Put/Call .83 -7.78%
NYSE Arms .91 -13.70%
Volatility(VIX) 12.12 -3.73%
ISE Sentiment 148.00 +13.85%
US Dollar 85.34 +.20%
CRB 300.71 -.05%

Futures Spot Prices
Crude Oil 61.40 +1.40%
Unleaded Gasoline 150.55 +2.33%
Natural Gas 4.49 -2.85%
Heating Oil 165.60 +.53%
Gold 594.80 -.17%
Base Metals 225.02 -3.06%
Copper 344.40 -.10%
10-year US Treasury Yield 4.54% -.90%

Leading Sectors
Semis +2.51%
Homebuilders +2.37%
Retail +2.17%

Lagging Sectors
Gold & Silver -.90%
Tobacco -1.62%
Steel -1.63%

Evening Review
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In Play

Afternoon Recommendations
Oppenheimer:
- Rated (FMC) Buy, target $75.

Afternoon/Evening Headlines
Bloomberg:
- US stocks rallied, sending the S&P 500 to a five-year high, after Fed Bank of Dallas President Fisher said the economy remains strong.
- Starbucks(SBUX) was sued by an independent café owner for alleged anti-competitive activities.
- President Bush and four business leaders led by Cisco Systems(CSCO) CEO Chambers pledged to provide $400 million in public and private money to help rebuild war-torn Lebanon as a demonstration of US commitment to democracy there.

AP:
- Iran’s foreign minister today said talks between top Iranian and European negotiators about his country’s nuclear program are “on track” and that a way out of the stand-off with the UN is possible.

Nikkei English News:
- Japan, the US and European nations are among 41 countries that agreed to draft a treaty for standardizing the patent approval process based on the first-to-file principle.

BOTTOM LINE: The Portfolio finished higher today on gains in my Computer longs, Semi longs, Retail longs, Medical longs and Steel shorts. I did not trade in the final hour, thus leaving the Portfolio 100% net long. The tone of the market was positive today as the advance/decline line finished higher, almost every sector gained and volume was about average. Measures of investor anxiety were lower into the close. Overall, today's market performance was bullish. Russian stocks fell 3.48% today, the world's worst performer. The RTSI is up 1,256% since October 1998. The index is testing its 200-day moving-average. Commodity-related companies account for the vast majority of the components of this index. I continue to believe that the recent mania for emerging market stocks was a function of the mania for commodities, and that emerging market stocks will underperform U.S. stocks over the intermediate term. I remain short iShares MSCI Emerging Markets Index (EEM).

Stocks Sharply Higher into Final Hour, Led by Tech, on Rotation Out of Commodities

BOTTOM LINE: The Portfolio is higher into the final hour on gains in my Semi longs, Medical longs, Retail longs and Computer longs. I exited my (IWM) and (QQQQ) hedges today, thus leaving the Portfolio 100% net long. The tone of the market is positive as the advance/decline line is higher, almost every sector is rising and volume is about average. The latest report from the NYSE shows that short interest on the exchange as a percentage of total shares outstanding (NYSIPRTS Index on Bloomberg) rose to 2.6% in mid September from 2.5% the prior month. This is another all-time record. This is up from an all-time low of 1.0% during September 1999. This bodes well for my prediction of significantly higher US stock prices through year-end. I expect US stocks to trade mixed-to-higher into the close from current levels on short-covering, declining interest rates and bargain hunting.

Today's Headlines

Bloomberg:
- Crude oil fell below $60/bbl. to a six-month low after BP Plc(BP) started work to restore production at Alaska’s Prudhoe Bay, the largest US oil field, and Iran said it favors talks on the country’s nuclear program.
- BP Plc(BP) began work to resume production on a portion of the eastern side of the Prudhoe Bay oilfield in Alaska, which has been shut since early August because of leaks and corroded pipelines.
- Altria Group’s(MO) Philip Morris USA and other cigarette makers must face a class-action lawsuit on behalf of “light” cigarette smokers nationwide, a judge ruled.
- Goldman Sachs(GS) and Morgan Stanley(MS), the Wall Street giants that sell more of everything from stocks and bonds to risk-analysis software to the burgeoning hedge fund industry, may be the biggest winners after Amaranth Advisors LLC said it lost $6 billion on natural gas speculation.
- Fed Bank of Dallas President Fisher said the central bank will take “appropriate action” to reduce inflation should the slowing economy fail to do so.
- US Treasuries are rising again, pushing the 10-year T-note to a seven month high, as a continuing fall in commodity prices lessons inflation concerns.

Wall Street Journal:
- MasterCard Inc.(MC) and Visa USA are starting to fine merchants who don’t follow rules that seek to guard transactions from fraud artists.
- Four US airlines are battling for the right to fly a new daily route to China that has the potential to be highly profitable.
- Wal-Mart Stores(WMT) is confronting a cultural clash in cities such as Boston where critics see the retailer as the epitome of pedestrian suburban values.
- The US Treasury Dept. and IRS are to introduce regulations to stop transactions intended to avoid US taxes when involving foreign companies.
- US health saving accounts plans that require employees to pay as much as $5,250 a year in medical costs out of their own pockets before insurance applies have forced many employers to become medical experts.
- Venezuela’s President Chavez has created his own version of Dante’s inferno with its nine concentric circles of evil, Alvaro Vargas Llosa wrote. Poverty in Venezuela has risen from 43% in 1999 when Chavez took over to 53% in the most recent survey, citing Venezuela’s Instituto Nacional de Estadistica.
- Luxury fashion houses such as Dolce & Gabbana, Versace and Marc Jacobs are using secondary, lower-priced labels to help boost sales.

NY Times:
- In Iraq, the so-called generator man, who owns and operates the neighborhood power plant, has become probably the most vilified figure in Iraqi society after Saddam Hussein.

NY Daily News:
- The rate of crimes in the New York City subway system is the lowest in 37 years, averages seven felonies a day, citing Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly.

Washington Post:
- Iraq will need a US military presence for a “long time” to prevent “foreign interference” in its affairs, citing Iraqi President Jalal Talabani.

AP:
- The US Department of Homeland Security will announce a nearly fourfold boost in annual funding to safeguard New York and New Jersey’s port perimeters.

Washington Times:
- A Hollywood producer is suing former President Bill Clinton, saying he cheated him out of a multi-million-dollar Internet venture.

Advertising Age:
- Advertising rates for Howard Stern’s radio program on Sirius Satellite Radio(SIRI) have fallen by at least two-thirds from when he was on free radio.

El Universal:
- Venezuelan poverty leaves about 70% of the population without a bank account, citing a poll by Caracas-based research firm Datanalisis.

Existing Home Sales Exceed Estimates

- Existing Home Sales for August fell to 6.3M versus estimates of 6.2M and 6.33M in July.
BOTTOM LINE: Sales of previously owned home in the US exceeded estimates in August, Bloomberg reported. The median sales price fell 1.7% to $225,000 from a year earlier. The supply of months for sale rose to 7.5 months versus 7.3 months in July. Purchases fell 2.3% in the West and .8% in the South. Sales rose .7% in the Midwest and 1.9% in the Northeast. I continue to believe housing will begin stabilizing over the next few months after only modest price declines which would be considered a soft-landing. The overall negative effects of housing on the US economy are being mostly offset by other very positive factors.

Links of Interest

Market Snapshot
Detailed Market Summary
Market Internals
Economic Commentary
Movers & Shakers
Today in IBD
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

Sunday, September 24, 2006

Monday Watch

Weekend Headlines
Bloomberg:
- The average US gasoline pump price fell 24 cents in the past two weeks to $2.42/gallon, the biggest decline in almost a year, as supplies stayed ahead of demand, Trilby Lundberg said, citing her survey of about 7,000 filling stations nationwide.
- Crude oil is falling to a 6-month low in NY as Iran’s President said his country is open to discussion on its nuclear program.
- The yen may fall to a 20-year low as individual investors in Japan join speculators on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange in selling the currency.
- Gilead Sciences(GILD) licensed eight Indian producers of generic drugs to make cheaper versions of the Viread AIDS medication, the company’s best-selling pill, for 95 countries where most people can’t afford treatment.
- European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet said labor productivity is the biggest problem facing the economy of the dozen euro nations.
- US Treasury 10-year notes had their biggest weekly advance since April 2005 as traders raised bets the Fed will begin lowering interest rates.
- Honda Motor(HMC) will introduce a diesel car that meets California’s emission standards and a fuel cell-powered sports car within three years as it vies with Toyota Motor(TM) for buyers of fuel-efficient autos.
- Noble Group Ltd., which accounts for 10% of ethanol exports from Brazil, may start investing in production plants in the South American nation to benefit from forecasts of rising global demand.
- Mutual fund investors, captivated by oil’s 88% rise in two years, increased their energy holdings in 2006 just in time to lose $4.5 billion. That’s the damage US oil and gas funds recorded as crude plunged 23% from July highs, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. A total of $23.5 billion poured into energy mutual funds in the 12 months ended July 31, according to Financial Research Corp. in Boston. As well, about $67.4 billion is invested in 525 energy and commodity hedge funds, more than double the $30 billion at the start of the year, according to Energy Hedge Fund Center. There were 180 such funds in October 2004.

Wall Street Journal:
- The richest US taxpayers earned 19% of total income in 2004 versus 20.8% in 2000, citing IRS data on tax returns.

Barron’s:
- Morgan Keegan topped the list for best returns in the past year and past six months, while Charles Schwab(SCHW) had the best returns over the past three-and five-year periods, according to Barron’s semi-annual ranking of brokerages’ top share recommendations.

Forbes:
- Really, really cheap oil is coming.

NY Times:
- Ford Motor’s(F) chief sales analyst, George Pipas, expects the market for sport-utility vehicles to continue declining despite the recent drop in gas prices.
- New rules adopted in May 2005 reduced the waiting time for patients awaiting lung transplants in the US by granting organs to those who need them most.
- Congress may close the so-called Enron Corp. loophole, which allows unregulated over-the-counter trading of energy commodities, because of Amaranth Group’s loss of $6 billion on natural gas trades. The Oil and Gas Traders Oversight Act of 2006, which would require regulation of energy commodity trading, has unanimous consent to come up before the Senate.

Washington Post:
- A half-dozen bills before Congress would protect as much as 1 million acres of wilderness areas while allocating a portion to real estate developers and local communities as trade-offs.

Crain’s Chicago Business:
- UAL Corp.’s United Airlines(UAUA), the world’s second largest airline, hired Goldman Sachs(GS) to explore strategic options, including possible mergers with other carriers.

AP:
- Boyd Gaming Corp.(BYD) gave up its bid to develop a slot-machine casino in Limerick, Pennsylvania, because the township board of supervisors didn’t support the plan.

NY Post:
- Tribune Co.(TRB), owner of Newsday and the LA Times, chose Merrill Lynch to conduct any auction of the company or assets.

Star-Ledger:
- NY Waterway and Billybey Ferry Co. will reduce ferry fares from Jersey City, New Jersey, to Wall Street when they take over the route Oct. 2.

Seattle Post-Intelligencer:
- Microsoft Corp.(MSFT) has donated more than $2.5 billion to charities since 1983, including cash, software, employee contributions and company matching funds.

Financial Times:
- Hedge funds that have invested billions of dollars in reinsurance companies and catastrophe bonds are expected to receive high returns as a mild hurricane season looks more likely.

Economic Daily News:
- Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing(TSM) said the island’s customized chipmakers will improve sales within the next six months after their clients use up inventories, citing company Vice Chairman Tseng Fan-chen.

The Standard:
- China doesn’t need further tightening measures to cool the economy, citing Qiu Xiaohua, head of the government’s National Bureau of Statistics. The measures “are effective, we will continue with them and keep a close eye on their outcome,” Qui said.

Der Spiegel:
- DaimlerChrysler(DCX) is close to agreeing with Chery Automobile on a contract to buy cheap, small cars from the Chinese company that it will sell in the US.

The Business:
- Saudi Arabia plans to step up production to 13.5 million barrels of oil a day by 2011 to counter supply disruptions, citing new projections given to bankers in London. Previously, Saudi Arabia was aiming to stabilize its production at about 12 million barrels a day. Saudi Arabia is planning to invest $30 billion in “downstream” projects in coming years and officials are meeting bankers this week to discuss funding.
- BT Group Plc has joined forces with T-Mobile International AG as part of its effort to grow revenue by 50% a year from its combined fixed and mobile-phone service to businesses in the US.

Globe and Mail:
- Pakistan must rein in religious schools, called maddrassas, if neighboring Afghanistan is ever to know peace, Afghan President Hamid Karzai said. Such schools preach hatred for Afghanistan and the rest of the world, Karzai said.

Gulf News:
- Middle East oil producing states will spend $395 billion on energy infrastructure between 2007 and 2011, citing the Arab Petroleum Investment Corp., a Saudi Arabia-based agency that provides funding for oil and gas related projects in the Arab world.

Weekend Recommendations
Barron's:
- Made positive comments on (NJ) and (DE).

Citigroup:
- Reiterated Buy on (RHAT), target $33.

Morgan Stanley:
- Reiterated Overweight on (PCLN), target $40.

Night Trading
Asian indices are unch. to +.25% on average.
S&P 500 indicated +.08%
NASDAQ 100 indicated +.11%.

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Earnings of Note
Company/Estimate
- (JLG)/.41
- (WAG)/.41

Upcoming Splits
- None of note

Economic Releases
10:00 am EST
- Existing Home Sales for August are estimated to fall to 6.2M versus 6.33M in July.

BOTTOM LINE: Asian Indices are mostly higher, boosted by technology shares in the region. I expect US stocks to open modestly lower and to rally into the afternoon, finishing modestly higher. The Portfolio is 75% net long heading into the week.