Portfolio Manager's Commentary on Investing and Trading in the U.S. Financial Markets
Thursday, December 27, 2007
Stocks Lower into Final Hour on Pakistan News, Profit-taking and More Economic Pessimism
Today's Headlines
Bloomberg:
- As the US savings and loan crisis worsened in the 1980s, analysts tried to top each other’s estimates of the debacle’s cost to the federal government. Much the same thing is happening now with losses linked to subprime mortgages, with figures of $300 billion to $400 billion being bandied about. A more realistic amount is probably half or less than those exaggerated projections – say $150 billion. That’s hardly chicken feed, though not nearly enough to sink the US economy.
- Pakistan’s Bhutto Assassinated in Attack at Rally.
- The cost of borrowing dollars, euros and pounds fell, adding to evidence that measures by central banks to east the gridlock in money markets are succeeding.
- The Fed will reduce interest rates at every policy setting meeting “for the next two to three quarters,” PIMCO’s Paul McCulley said in a note released today to clients. The central bank will act to “truncate both the length and the severity” of a contraction in lending, McCulley said.
- Crude oil is rising to a one-month high after as investment fund speculation rose after an EIA repot showed
- Wheat fell to a two-week low as rising production in
- Sotheby’s(BID), the world’s second-largest auction house, sold about 46% more art this year as US, Russian and Asian collectors bid up prices for contemporary artists such as Francis Bacon and Jeff Koons.
- Cirrus Logic(CRUS), the maker of computer chips for Bose Corp. and Pioneer Corp., rose more than 5% on the Nasdaq after a fund founded by billionaire George Soros boosted its stake in the company almost sevenfold.
- Pacific Crest analyst Andy Hargeaves said Apple Inc. will meet or exceed his earnings estimates, the Mac will continue to take market share and that Apple is still a good buy over $200.
BloggingStocks:
- Apple’s new price target: $300.
CNNMoney.com:
- Vestas Wind Systems Gets Order From AES For 52 Turbines.
AP:
- Acting New Jersey Governor Richard Codey will sign into law a bill he sponsored that restricts paroled sex offenders from surfing the Internet.
Trends-Tendances:
- European Central Bank council member Guy Quaden said the financial-market turmoil has yet to have a major effect on
Bear Radar
Style Underperformer:
Small-cap Value (-1.86%)
Sector Underperformers:
REITs (-2.49%), Airlines (-2.39%) and Coal (-2.01%)
Stocks Falling on Unusual Volume:
Bull Radar
Style Outperformer:
Large-cap Growth(-.89%)
Sector Outperformers:
Utilities (-.40%) Energy (-.55%) and Computer Hardware (-.54%)
Stocks Rising on Unusual Volume:
Bearish Sentiment Still Exceeds Levels Seen at Depths of 2000-2003 Bear Market
* Notwithstanding historical individual investor pessimism, corporate insiders continue to buy their own stocks hand over fist.
Furthermore, the 50-week moving average of the percentage of bears is currently 38.6%, an elevated level seen during only one other period since tracking began in the 80s. That period was October 1990-July 1991, right near another major stock market bottom. The extreme reading of the 50-week moving average of the percentage of bears during that period peaked at 41.6% on Jan. 31, 1991. The current reading of 38.6% is slightly above the peak during the 2000-2003 bear market, which was 38.1% on April 10, 2003. I find this even more astonishing, notwithstanding the recent pullback, given that the S&P 500 is currently 105% higher from the October 2002 major bear market lows and just 4.6% off a record high.
Individual investor pessimism towards US stocks is currently deep-seated and historical in nature. This is just more evidence of the current “Durable Goods Orders Rise, Jobless Caims Rise Slightly, Consumer Confidence Improves
- Durable Goods Orders for November rose .1% versus estimates of a 2.0% gain and a .4% decline in October.
- Durables Ex Transports for November fell .7% versus estimates of a .5% increase and a .9% decline in October.
- Initial Jobless Claims for this week rose to 349K versus estimates of 340K and 348K the prior week.
- Continuing Claims rose to 2713K versus estimates of 2645K and 2638K prior.
- Consumer Confidence for December rose to 88.6 versus estimates of 86.5 and a reading of 87.8 in November.
BOTTOM LINE: Orders for US durable goods rose less than forecast in November, partially restrained by a drop in defense orders, Bloomberg reported. Orders for military equipment fell 24%. However, Bookings Excluding Defense Equipment rose 1.2%. Orders for non-defense capital goods excluding aircraft, a gauge of future demand, declined .4% versus a 2.9% decline in October. Shipments of those items, used in computing GDP, rose .2% versus a 1.2% drop in October. Orders for transportation equipment rose 1.9%, boosted by a 21% jump in commercial aircraft demand. I expect Durable Goods Orders Ex Transports to rebound next month on inventory rebuilding.
The number of Americans filing first-time jobless claims for unemployment insurance rose slightly last week, Bloomberg reported. However, the four-week moving-average of new claims fell to 342,500 from 343,500. As well, the unemployment rate among those eligible to collect benefits, which tracks the