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Portfolio Manager's Commentary on Investing and Trading in the U.S. Financial Markets
Wednesday, March 05, 2008
Evening Review
Stocks Higher into Final Hour on Less Economic Pessimism, Short-Covering, Bargain-Hunting
Productivity/Unit Labor Costs Above Estimates, Factory Orders Decline for First Time in 5 Months, Service Sector Bounces Back
- Final 4Q Non-farm Productivity rose 1.9% versus estimates of a 1.8% gain and prior estimates of a 1.8% increase.
- Final 4Q Unit Labor Costs rose 2.6% versus estimates of a 2.1% gain and prior estimates of a 2.1% increase.
- Factory Orders for January fell 2.5% versus estimates of a 2.5% decline and a 2.0% increase in December.
- ISM Non-Manufacturing for February rose to 49.3 versus estimates of 47.3 and 44.6 in January.
BOTTOM LINE: Productivity in the
A gauge of the health of the service sector came in above estimates, Bloomberg reported. The Employment component of the index rose to 46.9 versus 43.9 the prior month. The New Orders component of the index rose to 49.6 from 43.5 the prior month. The Prices Paid component fell to 67.9 from 70.7 in January. I expect this gauge to move back above 50.0 over the next few months on pent-up demand as the stimulus hits, which will indicate expansion.
Bull Radar
Style Outperformer:
Large-cap Growth (+1.23%)
Sector Outperformers:
Oil Service (+2.44%), Steel (+2.03%) and Retail (+1.82%)
Stocks Rising on Unusual Volume:
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Oil Speculative Long Futures Contracts +112.9%, Global Oil Demand +2.0% Since 11/1/2005
(click on image to enlarge)
BOTTOM LINE: According to the latest commitment of traders report from the Commodity Futures & Trading Commission, crude oil speculative open long positions totaled 257,989 contracts. These speculative long positions, which are a gauge of investment fund demand(which is paper demand, not real physical demand) for the commodity, have soared 28.6% in just the last six weeks and 112.9% from November 2005. On the other hand, crude oil speculative short positions totaled 166,364 open contracts in the latest report, which is just 2.6% higher from levels seen in November 2005. I continue to believe investment fund speculation is the driving force behind the current oil bubble. Moreover, the oil bubble is one of the main driving forces behind the current "US negativity bubble," in my opinion. It is also noteworthy that since November 2005, global oil demand is up a total of only 2.0% to 86.3 million barrels per day, while global production is up 2.6% to 87.0 million barrels per day, according to the Energy Intelligence Group. The graph above depicts the spread between the oil speculative longs(top) and speculative shorts(bottom) since November 2005.