S&P 500 1,632.97 -1.84%*
The Weekly Wrap by Briefing.com.
*5-Day Change
Indices
- S&P 500 1,460.15 -.38%
- DJIA 13,579.40 -.10%
- NASDAQ 3,179.96 -.12%
- Russell 2000 855.51 -1.06%
- Value Line Geometric(broad market) 367.05 -1.37%
- Russell 1000 Growth 680.97 -.07%
- Russell 1000 Value 719.22 -.98%
- Morgan Stanley Consumer 840.59 +.70%
- Morgan Stanley Cyclical 998.41 -1.94%
- Morgan Stanley Technology 698.55 -.99%
- Transports 4,910.79 -5.85%
- Utilities 471.35 -.17%
- Bloomberg European Bank/Financial Services 85.16 +1.25%
- MSCI Emerging Markets 41.73 -.75%
- Lyxor L/S Equity Long Bias 1,053.31 +.69%
- Lyxor L/S Equity Variable Bias 807.55 +.88%
- Lyxor L/S Equity Short Bias 539.61 unch.
Sentiment/Internals
- NYSE Cumulative A/D Line 157,051 -.32%
- Bloomberg New Highs-Lows Index 149.0 -644
- Bloomberg Crude Oil % Bulls 25.9 -22.2%
- CFTC Oil Net Speculative Position 267,151 +7.4%
- CFTC Oil Total Open Interest 1,607,540 +1.37%
- Total Put/Call .80 +17.65%
- OEX Put/Call .98 -15.52%
- ISE Sentiment 108.0 -47.32%
- NYSE Arms 1.57 +95.06%
- Volatility(VIX) 13.98 -3.65%
- S&P 500 Implied Correlation 50.85 -4.34%
- G7 Currency Volatility (VXY) 7.88 -1.87%
- Smart Money Flow Index 11,811.35 +.72%
- Money Mkt Mutual Fund Assets $2.568 Trillion -.40%
- AAII % Bulls 37.5 +2.9%
- AAII % Bears 33.8 +2.4%
Futures Spot Prices
- CRB Index 308.98 -3.72%
- Crude Oil 92.89 -6.55%
- Reformulated Gasoline 294.26 -2.50%
- Natural Gas 2.89 -1.70%
- Heating Oil 312.67 -3.53%
- Gold 1,778.0 +.12%
- Bloomberg Base Metals Index 218.72 -1.21%
- Copper 378.90 -1.48%
- US No. 1 Heavy Melt Scrap Steel 362.0 USD/Ton +16.4%
- China Iron Ore Spot 106.40 USD/Ton +4.72%
- Lumber 278.0 -.07%
- UBS-Bloomberg Agriculture 1,699.79 -4.05%
Economy
- ECRI Weekly Leading Economic Index Growth Rate +2.7% +80 basis points
- Philly Fed ADS Real-Time Business Conditions Index -.7515 +6.23%
- S&P 500 Blended Forward 12 Months Mean EPS Estimate 111.90 +.21%
- Citi US Economic Surprise Index 20.6 +.2 point
- Fed Fund Futures imply 56.0% chance of no change, 44.0% chance of 25 basis point cut on 10/24
- US Dollar Index 79.39 +.66%
- Yield Curve 149.0 -12 basis points
- 10-Year US Treasury Yield 1.75% -12 basis points
- Federal Reserve's Balance Sheet $2.804 Trillion -.06%
- U.S. Sovereign Debt Credit Default Swap 30.42 -3.21%
- Illinois Municipal Debt Credit Default Swap 203.0 -5.64%
- Western Europe Sovereign Debt Credit Default Swap Index 132.20 new series
- Emerging Markets Sovereign Debt CDS Index 210.90 new series
- Saudi Sovereign Debt Credit Default Swap 86.30 -.15%
- Iraq Sovereign Debt Credit Default Swap 473.82 +18.46%
- China Blended Corporate Spread Index 411.0 -3 basis points
- 10-Year TIPS Spread 2.49% -15 basis points
- TED Spread 26.75 -2.0 basis points
- 2-Year Swap Spread 13.0 +.5 basis point
- 3-Month EUR/USD Cross-Currency Basis Swap -20.50 -3.75 basis points
- N. America Investment Grade Credit Default Swap Index 96.13 new series
- European Financial Sector Credit Default Swap Index 182.74 new series
- Emerging Markets Credit Default Swap Index 213.61 new series
- CMBS Super Senior AAA 10-Year Treasury Spread 122.0 unch.
- M1 Money Supply $2.413 Trillion -.60%
- Commercial Paper Outstanding 1,008.20 -.70%
- 4-Week Moving Average of Jobless Claims 377,800 +2,300
- Continuing Claims Unemployment Rate 2.6% unch.
- Average 30-Year Mortgage Rate 3.49% -6 basis points
- Weekly Mortgage Applications 851.60 -.18%
- Bloomberg Consumer Comfort -40.8 +1.4 points
- Weekly Retail Sales +2.50% -10 basis points
- Nationwide Gas $3.83/gallon -.04/gallon
- U.S. Cooling Demand Next 7 Days 4.0% below normal
- Baltic Dry Index 755.0 +14.0%
- Oil Tanker Rate(Arabian Gulf to U.S. Gulf Coast) 27.50 unch.
- Rail Freight Carloads 251,720 +17.34%
Best Performing Style
Worst Performing Style
Leading Sectors
- Tobacco +2.52%
- Telecom +2.44%
- Biotech +2.11%
- Drugs +1.90%
- Gold & Silver +1.68%
Lagging Sectors
- REITs -3.32%
- Steel -4.09%
- I-Banking -4.85%
- Coal -5.62%
- Road & Rail -8.30%
Weekly High-Volume Stock Gainers (13)
- IRIS, SHF, ASGN, GHDX, ALOG, GILD, APOG, ENR, WCN, AMTG, LNDC, ASEI and PHH
Weekly High-Volume Stock Losers (17)
- JAKK, AL, BBRG, GGC, SSYS, WERN, AMTD, NSC, MCS, BBBY, AREX, SAVE, DECK, HNI, SWKS, IHS and QCOR
Weekly Charts
ETFs
Stocks
*5-Day Change
Broad Market Tone:
- Advance/Decline Line: Higher
- Sector Performance: Mixed
- Volume: About Average
- Market Leading Stocks: Underperforming
Equity Investor Angst:
- VIX 13.71 -2.56%
- ISE Sentiment Index 114.0 -1.72%
- Total Put/Call .79 -5.95%
- NYSE Arms 1.31 +20.42%
Credit Investor Angst:
- North American Investment Grade CDS Index 96.23 bps +.02%
- European Financial Sector CDS Index 182.67 bps -2.36%
- Western Europe Sovereign Debt CDS Index 132.20 -1.47%
- Emerging Market CDS Index 213.06 +.88%
- 2-Year Swap Spread 13. -.25 basis point
- TED Spread 26.75 unch.
- 3-Month EUR/USD Cross-Currency Basis Swap -20.5 +1.75 basis points
Economic Gauges:
- 3-Month T-Bill Yield .10% -1 basis point
- Yield Curve 149.0 -2 basis points
- China Import Iron Ore Spot $106.40/Metric Tonne -2.47%
- Citi US Economic Surprise Index 20.6 unch.
- 10-Year TIPS Spread 2.49 -1 basis point
Overseas Futures:
- Nikkei Futures: Indicating -70 open in Japan
- DAX Futures: Indicating +2 open in Germany
Portfolio:
- Slightly Higher: On gains in my Biotech/Medical/Tech sector long
- Disclosed Trades: Added to my (IWM)/(QQQ) hedges, then covered some of them
- Market Exposure: 50% Net Long
Bloomberg:
- World Leaders Gather at UN as Arab Spring Turns Perilous. When world leaders last flew to New
York for the opening of the UN General Assembly session, fallen
Libyan dictator Muammar Qaddafi was a doomed man on the run,
Egyptian democracy protesters in Cairo’s Tahrir square had
prevailed and Syrians were struggling to be next. A year later, the mood is darker. In Libya, the weakness of
the post-Qaddafi government was demonstrated when gunmen
attacked the U.S. consulate in Benghazi, killing four Americans
including the ambassador. The long-suppressed Muslim Brotherhood
dominates Egyptian politics, a development being closely watched
by Israel and the U.S. In Syria, what began as a non-violent
uprising has degenerated into a sectarian war claiming some
20,000 lives as diplomacy stalls and President Bashar al-Assad
fights for his survival. “The bloom has come off the rose,” said Charles Kupchan,
a professor of international affairs at Georgetown University.
“The initial reaction was excessive optimism that we were at
the beginning of liberal democracy in the Middle East and that
is not how the region has played out.”
- Clinton Said to Plan Removing MEK From Terrorism List.
Secretary of State Hillary Clintonwill notify Congress today that she
intends to take the Iraniandissident group Mujahedin-e-Khalq, or MEK,
off a list ofterrorist organizations, a State Department official said. A
decision will be formally announced before Oct. 1, a
second department official said today. The officials spoke on
the condition of anonymity pending notification of Congress. The U.S. put the group on its terrorism list in 1997 for
its alleged involvement in the killing of six Americans in Iran
in the 1970s. The MEK had also made a failed attempt to kidnap
the U.S. ambassador to Iran in 1971.
- Draghi Plan Helping Only Those Who Don’t Need It: Euro Credit. The European Central Bank’s plan to
buy bonds is proving more successful at keeping borrowing costs
for France and Belgium near record lows than persuading
investors to lend to Spain and Italy for less. Spain’s three-year yield is back up to 3.83 percent after
dipping to 3.37 percent on Sept. 7, the day after ECB President
Mario Draghi detailed his proposal to buy unlimited debt for
countries that agree to economic conditions in return for help.
Since then, investors have lost 0.1 percent on Spanish debt
repayable in three year or less, and made 0.1 percent on Belgian
notes with similar maturities. The cost of insuring French debt
against default has declined 24 percent, almost twice the 13
percent drop in Italian default-swap costs. “What Draghi has done has been beneficial to some degree,
but there’s still skepticism in the market because Spain hasn’t
taken the final step and asked for help,” said Adrian Owens at
GAM Ltd. in London, which oversees $62 billion. “It doesn’t
change the fact Spain still has a huge problem to tackle. France
and Belgium are seen as a safer play.”
- Italy, Spain to Shun Aid Unless Yields Jump, Polillo Says. Italy and Spain
won’t request bailouts unless a new surge in bond yields leaves them
shut out of markets, as no government will voluntarily accept conditions
imposed for the aid, a senior Italian government official said. “There
won’t be any nation that voluntarily, with a pre- emptive move, even if
rationally justified, would go to an international body and say, ‘I
give up my national sovereignty,’” Gianfranco Polillo, undersecretary of
finance, said in an interview in Rome late yesterday. “I rule it out
for Italy and for any other country.” The program “will be activated only when the single countries have the water up to their necks,” Polillo said.
- Schaeuble Says Greek Program On Limits of What’s Possible. German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble ruled out more financial help for Greece, saying the
last bailout stretched international creditors to their limits. Schaeuble, 70, speaking to reporters in Berlin today, said
that he’s “convinced that we went to the limit of what’s
economically justifiable with the second Greek program.” It was
“very difficult” to put it together under existing rules and
questioning it won’t instill confidence. Schaeuble said he doesn’t want to speculate whether Greece
needs another reduction of its debt because that would unsettle
financial markets. “The conditions for the payment of the next
tranche are clearly defined,” Schaeuble said. Greek Prime Minister Antonis Samaras is struggling to reach
agreement with his coalition partners on an 11.5 billion-euro
($14.9 billion) budget-cut package that’s key to receiving
international aid funds.
- Dollar Funding Costs Head for First Weekly Increase Since July. The cost for European banks to
borrow in dollars is heading for the first weekly increase since
July, according to a money-markets indicator. The three-month cross-currency basis swap, the rate banks
pay to convert euro interest payments into dollars, was 22 basis
points below the euro interbank offered rate at 8:15 a.m. in
London compared with minus 17 on Sept. 14, according to data
compiled by Bloomberg. The cost reached a 14-month low of 15.1
at the end of last week. The one-year basis swap was 25 basis points, or 0.25
percentage point, below Euribor from minus 26.5 yesterday. A measure of European banks’ reluctance to make unsecured
loans to one another held at the lowest since March 2011. The
difference between Euribor and overnight index swaps, the
Euribor-OIS spread, was little changed at 15 basis points. The European Banking Federation’s euro overnight index
average, or Eonia, of unsecured lending deals was set at 0.097
percent yesterday from 0.09 percent the day before. The Eonia
swap, an estimate of average overnight borrowing costs over the
next three months, was unchanged at 7.6 basis points. Lenders increased overnight deposits at the European
Central Bank yesterday, placing 302 billion euros ($392 billion)
with the Frankfurt-based central bank from 299 billion euros the
day before.
- Asia-to-Europe
Container Shipments Turn Unprofitable on Fuel Hit. Container shipments
from Shanghai to Europe have turned unprofitable as the sovereign debt
crisis hurts demand from consumers and companies including Maersk Line
struggle to pass on fuel costs, figures released today show. Spot prices
fell 3.8% to $1,172 per standard container in the week ended Sept. 21
after dropping 5.1% in the previous seven days, and have tumbled 38%
since June 29, according to London-based ship broker ICAP Plc. Shippers
need rates of $1,200 to $1,350 per box to make a profit on the key route
linking producers in China with markets in northwest Europe, according
to Kai Miller, head of ICAP's container desk. This week marks the first
time rates have fallen below that level since Feb. 24, the broker's data
shows.
- Cyprus Should Mull Euro Exit, Ruling Party Head Tells 24h.com.cy. Cyprus may abandon the euro if
international lenders insist on excessively onerous austerity
measures, 24h.com.cy reported, citing Andros Kyprianou, general
secretary of the communist party AKEL. “If the troika insists on very painful measures, should we
remain stubborn and say we won’t leave the euro area because
it’s so important to us?” Kyprianou said in a video clip posted
on the website of the Cypriot online newspaper. Kyprianou was referring to the so-called troika that
oversees euro-area bailouts, comprised of officials from the
European Commission, the European Central Bank and the
International Monetary Fund. Cypriot President Demetris Christofias is a member and former leader of the AKEL party. “I’m not prejudging what we should do, but I am saying
that these questions have to be discussed very seriously if we
really want to serve the interests of the Cypriot people,” he
said in a second clip.
- U.K. Posts Record August Deficit as Tax Revenue Falls: Economy. Britain posted its biggest August
budget deficit on record, heaping pressure on Chancellor of the
Exchequer George Osborne as the recession hits tax revenue and
pushes up spending on welfare. The shortfall excluding government support for banks was
14.4 billion pounds ($23.5 billion), the Office for National
Statistics said in London today. The median of 21 forecasts in a
Bloomberg News survey was for a deficit of 15 billion pounds.
Tax revenue rose 1.8 percent in August from a year earlier and
government spending climbed 2.5 percent.
- Jobless Rate Rises in Five of 10 U.S. Campaign Swing States. The jobless rate rose in August in five of 10 states
considered battlegrounds in the U.S. presidential election less than two
months before voters head to the polls. Unemployment climbed in
Wisconsin, New Hampshire, Iowa, North Carolina and Nevada, figures from
the Labor Department showed today in Washington. Changes in the unemployment rate in the
swing states may influence voters as they weigh President Barack Obama’s
argument that his policies are helping heal the economy and Republican
challenger Mitt Romney’s contention that the president’s policies have
left Americans worse off than they were four years ago. Unemployment climbed to 7.5 percent in Wisconsin last month from 7.3
percent in July, rose to 5.7 percent from 5.4 percent in New Hampshire,
and increased in Iowa to 5.5 percent from 5.3 percent. The jobless rate
in North Carolina rose to 9.7 percent in August from 9.6 percent and
advanced in Nevada to 12.1 percent, the highest in the nation, from 12
percent. The jobless rate in Ohio was 7.2 percent in August for a third month and stayed at 8.8 percent in Florida.
- Gold Seen Luring Wealthy as Central Bankers Expand Stimulus. More high-net-worth individuals are seeking to buy gold to
protect their wealth from the risk of rising inflation after central
banks boosted stimulus, according to Deutsche Bank AG’s asset and
wealth management unit. “Gold has historically been considered to
be a store of value and an inflation hedge and increasingly it is being
utilized as a monetary instrument,” said Mark Smallwood, head of
Asia-Pacific wealth-management solutions. “There is a growing interest
among our clients to gain exposure,” he said, with an increased
preference for physical holdings. Gold is in the 12th year of a
bull run, 13.5 percent higher this year, as investors seek to hedge
against weaker currencies and the threat of rising consumer prices.
Holdings in gold- backed exchange-traded products expanded to an
all-time high yesterday, and Bank of America Corp. and Deutsche Bank are
among banks forecasting that the price will rally to a record. “With
the movements by the central banks globally in the last few weeks,
there is considerable investor concern as to the long-term effects of
the liquidity infusions,” Smallwood said by phone from Guilin, China
yesterday. “As a result of that, private clients are concerned about the
possible future effects of inflation and the means of hedging that
risk.”
- Senate JPMorgan(JPM) Probe Said to Seek Tougher Volcker Rule. A U.S. Senate panel probing the multibillion-dollar trading loss by JPMorgan Chase & Co. plans to unveil its findings at a hearing this year to press regulators
to tighten the Volcker rule, according to three people briefed on the
matter. Staff members of the Permanent Subcommittee on
Investigations, headed by Senator Carl Levin, have interviewed JPMorgan
officials as well as examiners and supervisors at the institution’s
regulator, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, said the
people, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the inquiry isn’t
public.
- Bearish Treasury Bets Hit a Record Amid Inflation Concern. Options traders are paying record
prices to protect against swings in long-term U.S. Treasuries
relative to stocks amid concern inflation will accelerate. Implied volatility (TLT), the key gauge of options prices, for
contracts with an exercise level closest to the iShares Barclays
20+ Year Treasury Bond Fund (TLT) has climbed to 16.65, compared with
13.85 for the SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (SPY), according to three-month
data compiled by Bloomberg. The ratio between the two ETFs
reached 1.24 on Sept. 14, the highest since at least 2005.
Wall St. Journal:
Day of Protests in Pakistan Turns Deadly. Pakistani protesters clashed with police in a number of cities after
Friday prayers over an anti-Islam video, leading to at least 17 people
dead. At least 12 of the deaths were in Karachi, a violent port town, where
thousands of protesters set fire to government and private property.
Some of the dead included police, the Associated Press reported.
Global Sales of iPhone 5 Kick Off With Crowds.
MarketWatch.com:
CNBC:
- Dalio Fears Social Unrest That Led to Hitler’s Rise. Ray Dalio, founder and co-chief investment officer of the world's
largest hedge fund, Bridgewater Associates, thinks it’s likely the euro
will survive; however, he does predict a “10 to 15 year managed
depression” in Southern Europe. In a worst case scenario, he painted a
much darker picture. “When people get at each other’s throat, the rich and the poor and the
left and the right and so on, and you have a basic breakdown, that
becomes very threatening,” Dalio told CNBC in an exclusive interview on “Squawk Box.”
- BofA(BAC), JPMorgan(JPM), Citi(C) Repeatedly Hacked by Iran: Sources. Iranian hackers have repeatedly attacked Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase and Citigroup
over the past year, as part of a broad cyber campaign targeting the
United States, according to people familiar with the situation.
- Trade Growth to Plunge Below 20-Year Average. World trade will grow by a mere 2.5 percent this year, dragged down by
Europe to less than half of the previous 20-year average, the World
Trade Organization (WTO) said on Friday.
- Brazil’s Finance Chief Attacks US Over QE3. Guido Mantega, Brazil’s finance minister, has warned that the U.S.
Federal Reserve’s “protectionist” move to roll out more quantitative
easing will reignite the currency wars with potentially drastic
consequences for the rest of the world.
Zero Hedge:
- Europe Finally Comes Out: Obama's Reelection Determines Europe's Bailout Cycle. For those to whom this comes as a surprise, following the periodic
jaunts of Tim Geithner to Europe explaining just what is truly important
in life, not to mention Obama's daily phone calls to Mario Monti, we
feel truly sorry: EU-IMF REVIEW OF GREEK DEBT SITUATION SET TO BE DELAYED UNTIL AFTER U.S. ELECTION - EUROPEAN OFFICIALS. And the punchline: "Obama doesn't want anything on a macroeconomic scale that
is going to rock the global economy before Nov. 6," a senior EU official said. At least it is finally clear that the entire world's agenda is to get
Obama reelected, broke Athens municipalities no longer collecting
garbage, and running out of cash to pay the local Five-Oh
notwithstanding.
- First Spanish Bailouts Conditions Revealed: Pension Freeze, Retirement Age Hike.
- Police Open Fire On "Prophet Protesters" In Pakistan, One Killed.
- Economic Charts:
- Mitt Romney Releases 2011 Tax Filing. For those strapped for time here is the summary: Romneys 2011 tax rate 14.1%, Charity donations: 30%; Obamas tax rate: 20.5%, Charity donations: 22%. And going back, "Over the entire 20-year period, the average annual effective federal tax rate was 20.20%."
Business Insider:
New York Times:
California Debt Higher Than Earlier Estimates, a Task Force Reports. Gov. Jerry Brown
of California announced when he came into office last year that he had
found an alarming $28 billion “wall of debt” looming over the state,
which had to be dismantled. Since then, he has slowed the issuance of municipal bonds,
called for spending cuts and tried to persuade the state’s famously
antitax voters to approve a tax increase this fall. On Thursday, an independent group of fiscal experts said Mr. Brown’s
efforts were all well and good, but in fact, the “wall of debt” was
several times as big as the governor thought. Directors of the State Budget Crisis Task Force
said their researchers had found a lot of other debts that did not turn
up in California’s official tally. Much of it involved irrevocable
promises to provide pensions to public workers, health care for
retirees, the cost of delayed highway maintenance and an estimated $40
billion bill to bring drinking water up to federal standards. They also pointed out many of the same unpaid bills from previous years
that the governor had brought to light, like $8 billion in delayed
payments to schools and community colleges, and $250 million that was
raided from a fund dedicated to transportation and treated as revenue. The task force estimated that the burden of debt totaled at least $167
billion and as much as $335 billion. Its members warned that the
off-the-books debts tended to grow over time, so that even if Mr. Brown
should succeed in pushing through his tax increase, gaining an
additional $50 billion over the next seven years, the wall of debt would
still be there, casting its shadow over the state.
Real Clear Markets:
- Monetary Policy Is Now An All-Too-Real Depressant. We cannot have a manipulated, centrally planned recovery without housing. A
market recovery on its own is entirely possible, feasible and even likely, but
that would require recognition that after four years of massive monetary
intrusion to rebuild the worst of the artificial world of 2006 these economic
"laws" are no longer applicable. QE 3 cannot possibly succeed as traditionally
defined, but it is not a neutral proposition without a downside.
Reuters:
Telegraph:
Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung:
- Italy
has made "extraneous demands" that have slowed German ratification of
the ESM. Italian demands this week kept German Cabinet from endorsing
euro region member states' approval of German declaration that limits
German liabilities to ESM.
Kathimerini:
- Greece
may introduce new taxes demand by the troika of inspectors from the
European Commission, the ECB and the IMF in an effort to raise 2 billion
euros on top of 11.6 billion euros in cuts to spending. The measures
include a tax on self-employed professionals as well as the removal of
the tax-free threshold for the self employed.
El Confidencial:
- The
Spanish government has asked Sandander, Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria
and CaixaBank to take a 30% stake in the bad bank. The government
wanted the three banks to take a larger stake. The banks haven't agreed
to participate yet and are showing strong resistance to participation.
International real estate funds show no interest in the bad bank, citing people in the financial sector.
Nikkei:
- Canon Halts Factory in China's Guangdong Today. The company halted operations at its factory in China's Guangdong province today.
Style Underperformer:
Sector Underperformer:
- 1) Coal -.70% 2) Airlines -.66% 3) Road & Rail -.56%
Stocks Falling on Unusual Volume:
- DLLR,
ZOLT, HOTT, SWFT, MNST, DOW, WFC, IQNT, DELL, AI, BTH, IHS, MMP, RBC,
UPS, ADBE, VVUS, ISIS, CLF, WWD, COH, GMCR, AVD, WPRT, IT, GT, CE, MELI,
HAIN, ASML, MM and CTB
Stocks With Unusual Put Option Activity:
- 1) ECA 2) EMC 3) HYG 4) JEF 5) KORS
Stocks With Most Negative News Mentions:
- 1) BTU 2) BHI 3) GT 4) GS 5) FDX
Charts:
Style Outperformer:
Sector Outperformers:
- 1) Telecom +1.67% 2) Homebuilding +1.43% 3) Drugs +.79%
Stocks Rising on Unusual Volume:
- SNSS, THR, SWKS, KBH, KORS, QCOR, AVGO, PCS, VPHM, INVN, EXPE and DRI
Stocks With Unusual Call Option Activity:
- 1) FTR 2) DLPH 3) EGO 4) EXPE 5) ASNA
Stocks With Most Positive News Mentions:
- 1) LMT 2) TQNT 3) CAG 4) DRI 5) GOOG
Charts: