Portfolio Manager's Commentary on Investing and Trading in the U.S. Financial Markets
Friday, February 22, 2008
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Thursday, February 21, 2008
Friday Watch
Late-Night Headlines
Bloomberg:
- Two members of the panel charged with dating US economic cycles said while increasing evidence of a downturn has drawn their attention, it’s too early to declare whether a recession has begun. “Notwithstanding the darkening clouds, we are still far from the point where the committee would act,” Roberta Hall, a Stanford University economist who leads the National Bureau of Economic Research’s business cycle dating committee, said in an interview.
- Crude oil fell for a second day in NY after an Energy Dept. report showed that US inventories rose almost twice as much as forecast and refiners slowed processing to perform seasonal maintenance. “There comes a point where fundamentals can no longer be ignored,” said Michael Fitzpatrick, vp for energy risk management at MF Global. “You can’t justify $100 oil when inventories are up six weeks, demand is weak and the economy is slowing.” Crude oil supplies have risen 7.9% in just the last six weeks. “Refineries are curtailing output for economic reasons. There’s weak product demand and they are responding by reducing output,” said Tim Evans, an energy analyst at Citigroup Global Markets. Total implied fuel demand is down 1.1% over the last four weeks from a year earlier. Gasoline inventories climbed 1 million barrels to 230.3 million, the highest since February 1994. “Gasoline supplies are near the highest level ever, and crude oil supplies are still gaining,” said Kyle Cooper, director of research at IAF Advisors in Houston.
MarketWatch.com:
- RIM shares jump on raised subscriber forecast. BlackBerry maker says seasonal slowdown didn’t occur in Feb. quarter.
CNBC.com:
- Amid ‘Stagflation’ Fear, Opportunities Abound.
NY Times:
- AOL Prods Users to Switch to Firefox, Drop Netscape.
- At Toyota, a Global Giant Reaches for Agility.
- A Short-Selling Savior? Does William Ackman want to save troubled bond insurers or to bury them? A break-up proposal raises questions.
BusinessWeek.com:
- Microsoft(MSFT) Pledges Fail to Move the EU.
- Google(GOOG) Goes to the Doc’s Office. The search giant’s pilot program with the Cleveland Clinic is aimed at giving patients and doctors better access to electronic medical records.
Portfolio.com:
- Google’s(GOOG) Video AdSense: Just the Beginning?
Reuters:
- MBIA(MBI) says municipal, corporate units should split.
Financial Times:
- NY hedge fund DB Zwirn & Co is winding down its principal funds after investors – rattled by lapses in internal controls, including the expense of a private jet used by the firm’s founder – said they would withdraw more than $2 billion.
Late Buy/Sell Recommendations
Citigroup:
- Reiterated Buy on (JCP), target $58.
Night Trading
Asian Indices are -3.0% to -.50% on average.
S&P 500 futures -.30%.
NASDAQ 100 futures -.14%.
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- (
- (ENDP)/.44
- (HTV)/.30
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- (HUN)/.25
- (SYNT)/.35
- (PCG)/.55
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Upcoming Splits
- None of note
Economic Releases
- None of note
Other Potential Market Movers
- The Fed’s Fisher speaking, CIBC Institutional Investor Conference, DA Davidson Electronic Systems Design Conference and EnerCom Oil Service Conference could also impact trading today.
Stocks Finish Near Session Lows, Weighed Down by Financial, Energy Shares
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In Play
Stocks Lower into Final Hour on Shorting, Economic Worries
Jobless Claims Decline, Philly Fed Weak, Leading Indicates Slightly Lower
- Initial Jobless Claims for this week fell to 349K versus estimates of 349K and 358K the prior week.
- Continuing Claims rose to 2736K versus estimates of 2760K and a downwardly revised 2736K prior.
- Philly Fed for February fell to -24.0 versus estimates of -10.0 and a reading of -20.9 in January.
- Leading Indicators for January fell .1% versus estimates of a .1% decline and an upwardly revised .1% decline in December.
BOTTOM LINE: The number of Americans filing first time jobless claims fell this week, Bloomberg reported. The four-week moving average of claims rose to 360,500. The unemployment rate among those eligible to collect benefits, which tracks the
The Philly region gauge of manufacturing contracted more than economists expected this month, Bloomberg reported. The New Orders component of the index rose to -10.9 from -15.2 the prior month. The Inventories component of the index fell to -13 from -11.7 the prior month. The Employment component rose to 2.5 from 1.5 the prior month. The Prices Paid component fell to 46.6 from 49.8 in January. I expect this gauge to rebound in March on inventory rebuilding as exports continue to boom.