BOTTOM LINE: The Portfolio is slightly lower into the final hour on losses in my Medical longs, Biotech longs and Technology longs. I exited my (ILMN) long and added to a few other longs today, thus leaving the Portfolio 100% net long. The tone of the market is negative as the advance/decline line is lower, most sectors are declining and volume is slightly below average. Investor anxiety is very high. Today’s overall market action is mildly bearish. The VIX is falling -1.34% and is high at 22.11. The ISE Sentiment Index is around average at 137.0 and the total put/call is around average at .85. Finally, the NYSE Arms has been running below average most of the day, hitting .34 at its intraday trough, and is currently .72. The Euro Financial Sector Credit Default Swap Index is rising +4.73% to 67.07 basis points. This index is down from its record March 10th high of 208.75. The North American Investment Grade Credit Default Swap Index is falling -.95% to 99.25 basis points. This index is also well below its Dec. 5th record high of 285.99. The TED spread is rising +2 basis points to 24 basis points. The TED spread is now down 440 basis points since its all-time high of 463 basis points on October 10th. The 2-year swap spread is falling -.63% to 29.69 basis points. The Libor-OIS spread is unch. at 13 basis points. The 10-year TIPS spread, a good gauge of inflation expectations, is rising +4 basis points to 2.20%, which is down -45 basis points since July 7th. The 3-month T-Bill is yielding .03%, which is down -2 basis points today.(XLF)/(IYR) have traded well throughout the day. (BAC) is especially strong, rising +3.5%.Oil tanker, telecom, bank, i-bank, ag, drug, reit and restaurant stocks are all higher on the day.The bears were once again unable to gain meaningful traction after this morning’s weakness.The S&P 500 is holding above the key 1,100 level and today’s overall action appears to be another healthy consolidation of recent gains.On the negative side, tech has been a drag throughout the day.Small-caps continue to underperform.Unless the bears can mount an assault on the financials, another surge higher in the broad market is still likely before week’s end.Nikkei futures indicate an unch. open in Japan and DAX futures indicate an +12 open in Germany tomorrow. I expect US stocks to trade modestly higher into the close from current levels on short-covering, earnings optimism, seasonal strength and technical buying.
- Natural gas tumbled more than 5 percent, the biggest drop this month, as mild weather trimmed demand for the heating and power-plant fuel. Inventories rose to a record 3.813 trillion cubic feet in the week ended Nov. 6. “People had banked on getting to that 3.8 level and then coming off from there,” said Cameron Horwitz, an analyst at SunTrust Robinson Humphrey Inc. in Houston. “It looks like it’s just going to keep going higher for at least the next two or three weeks.” Horwitz estimates that another 40 billion cubic feet of natural gas may be put into storage between now and the end of November instead of a typical decline of 70 billion in that period. Storage sites are now at 98 percent of peak capacity, which the Energy Department estimates at about 3.9 trillion cubic feet. Futures may dip below $4 as the price threatens to plunge through recent lows, said Stephen Briggs, a partner at Intermarket Management LLC in Verona, New Jersey, a brokerage and energy risk-management firm. “There’s just no reason for gas to be high and once you get above $5, no one is into that at this stage,” said Briggs.
- Quinnipiac is out with a poll:President Obama’s job approval is under 50% for the first time, at 48%. Obama is still on the positive side, with just 42% thinking he is doing a poor job. But it is not good news for a President trying to push through a tough set of initiatives, with health care and revamping the Afghanistan war at the forefront. Elsewhere in the survey, Obama gets a 47-46 split on handling the economy — a big drop from October’s 52-43. Voters say 47 - 42 percent that President Obama should send 40,000 more combat troops to Afghanistan as the military commanders on the ground have requested.
- The debate over Droid v. iPhone rages on, but lots more Android surprises are on the way. Get ready for the Google(GOOG) Phone. It’s no longer a myth, it’s real.The next “super” Android device will almost certainly be a HTC phone that’s much thinner than even the Droid or iPhone – The Dragon/Passion.This is the phone the senior Android guys at Google are now carrying around and testing, at least as of a couple of weeks ago. If you’re willing to give up the Droid’s keyboard, the Dragon/Passion is going to be a really cool phone. It should be fully available very soon.But it isn’t the Google Phone. Everything up until now has just been a warm up to the Google Phone.
- Mounting evidence that independent voters have soured on the Democrats is prompting a debate among party officials about what rhetorical and substantive changes are needed to halt the damage. Following serious setbacks with independents in off-year elections earlier this month, White House officials attributed the defeats to local factors and said President Barac Obama sees no need to reposition his own image or the Democratic message. Since then, however, a flurry of new polls makes clear that Democrats are facing deeper problems with independents—the swing voters who swung dramatically toward the party in 2006 and 2008 but who now are registering deep unease with the amount of spending and debt called for under Obama's agenda in an era of one-party rule in Washington. A Gallup Poll released last week offered a disturbing glimpse about the state of play: just 14 percent of independents approve of the job Congress is doing, the lowest figure all year. In just the past few days alone, surveys have shown Democratic incumbents trailing Republicans among independent voters by double-digit margins in competitive statewide contests in places as varied as Connecticut, Ohio and Iowa. Obama’s own popularity among independents has fallen significantly, too. A CBS News poll Tuesday showed the president’s approval rating among unaligned voters falling to 45 percent — down from 63 percent in April.
- JPMorgan Chase & Co. Chief Executive Officer Jamie Dimon said regulators need to devise a system that allows “big” banks to go bankrupt without hurting the economy and taxpayers, citing an interview. Regulators need to be careful that stricter rules for banks’ capital don’t limit bank lending, he added.
Alrroya Aleqtissadiya:
- Saudi Arabian central bank Governor Muhammad al-Jasser said his country “benefits” from the riyal’s peg to the dollar as long as the US currency remains the main global reserve.