Thursday, December 13, 2012

Bear Radar

Style Underperformer:
  • Large-Cap Growth -.82%
Sector Underperformers:
  • 1) Gold & Silver -3.10% 2) Oil Service -1.61% 3) Semis -1.31%
Stocks Falling on Unusual Volume:
  • STI, PBR, BPFH, TASR, ALLT, RBC, NOV, CKH, HIBB, ENDP, TDG, FIS, NTES, AZN, SPG, EMN, GDI, CME, DLB, MMLP, VIAB, FMX, KOF, CLR, BTE, BNNY, SFLY, MIC, RH and DKS
Stocks With Unusual Put Option Activity:
  • 1) CI 2) GM 3) FSLR 4) ADBE 5) APC
Stocks With Most Negative News Mentions:
  • 1) LXK 2) NBR 3) IRF 4) RIG 5) MET
Charts:

Bull Radar

Style Outperformer:
  • Small-Cap Value -.30%
Sector Outperformers:
  • 1) Education +1.29% 2) Airlines +.89% 3) Networking +.88%
Stocks Rising on Unusual Volume:
  • NIHD, INFI, BBY, RIMM, FNSR, UAL and INFA
Stocks With Unusual Call Option Activity:
  • 1) MDRX 2) SPLS 3) CLWR 4) MBI 5) BBY
Stocks With Most Positive News Mentions:
  • 1) RTN 2) TSO 3) CRL 4) DRC 5) CVS
Charts:

Thursday Watch

Evening Headlines 
Bloomberg: 
  • Euro Rebuilding Vision Fades as Germany’s Vote Looms Over Crisis. Europe has lost the vision thing. The word “vision” appeared seven times in a June outline for transforming the euro zone into an American or Swiss-style economic union. It dropped out of an October follow-up and is absent from a final roadmap to be discussed at a summit in Brussels today. The scaled-back ambitions reflect ebbing pressure from financial markets, pre-election politics in Germany, a hardening of the ideological divide between northern and southern Europe, and the recognition that an overhaul of economic governance won’t work without a banking-system fix. “EU leaders might as well stay home,” Guy Verhofstadt, a former Belgian prime minister who is now in the European Parliament, said in Strasbourg, France, yesterday. “The political reality is that we are all waiting for the German elections before taking the crucial steps to end the crisis.
  • Foreclosed G-8 Venue Mirrors N. Irish Economy as Riots Escalate.
  • Tory Skeptics Raise Rebel Flag as Cameron Pressured on EU. In the London mansion where Benjamin Franklin negotiated American independence, British rebels gathered to toast their own fight against the European Union and deliver a warning shot to Prime Minister David Cameron. More than 100 people, including two Conservative Cabinet ministers, descended on the Lansdowne Club last month to celebrate the 20th anniversary of the Maastricht rebellion, when Tory lawmakers defied Prime Minister John Major and voted against the treaty that created the EU. 
  • Kiehl’s Cucumber Toner at 18 Euros Shows Luxury Weakness: Retail. When Ilse Morgan lived in New York, she often bought cosmetics from Kiehl (OR)’s, a 161-year-old pharmacy on the Lower East Side that has grown into a global brand. Since moving to Amsterdam, Morgan has found Kiehl’s products but rarely buys. The prices, she says, are just too far above what she paid in New York. “If it was the same, then I would happily make purchases here,” said the 42-year-old advertising manager who has lived in the Netherlands for a decade. “They lose my business with the pricing.”
  • Made-by-Obama Fiscal Cliff Debate Hides Jobless Toll. President Barack Obama and House Speaker John Boehner are engaged in negotiations over shrinking the budget deficit even as high unemployment is taking a greater human and financial toll on the nation’s economic health. By depressing tax revenue and inflating mandatory social spending, unemployment is costing the government more than twice the $220 billion taxpayers will spend this year paying interest on the debt, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Chronic joblessness is also leaving scars on society, crippling the earning power of millions and hamstringing future growth. Less than 59 percent of working-age Americans are employed, near a three-decade low, while the cost of servicing the debt as a percentage of economic output is no greater than in 1970. “The labor market crisis has been going on for some years now, is still with us, is receding only slowly and is doing damage every single minute,” said former Federal Reserve Vice Chairman Alan Blinder.
  • More CEOs Plan Capital-Spending Cuts as U.S. Nears Fiscal Cliff. The number of U.S. chief executive officers planning to trim capital expenditures has risen amid the political standoff over more than $600 billion in federal tax increases and spending cuts, the Business Roundtable said. A survey conducted by the Washington-based CEO group from Nov. 12 to Nov. 30 found that 23 percent expect their companies to reduce capital spending during the next six months, according to a statement today. That increased from 19 percent in a survey completed in September. “The uncertainty about the fiscal and monetary environment and the budget environment that we find ourselves in is putting a damper on investment,” Jim McNerney, chairman of the Business Roundtable and CEO of aircraft manufacturer Boeing Co. (BA), told reporters today on a conference call. 
  • Aetna(AET) CEO Sees Obama Health Law Doubling Some Premiums. Health insurance premiums may as much as double for some small businesses and individual buyers in the U.S. when the Affordable Care Act’s major provisions start in 2014, Aetna Inc. chief executive officer said. While subsidies in the law will shield some people, other consumers who make too much for assistance are in for “premium rate shock,” Mark Bertolini, who runs the third-biggest U.S. health-insurance company, told analysts today at a conference in New York. The prospect has spurred discussion of having Congress delay or phase in parts of the law, he said. “We’ve shared it all with the people in Washington and I think it’s a big concern,” the CEO said. “We’re going to see some markets go up as much as as 100 percent.” 
  • China’s Stocks Drop Most in More Than a Week as Brokerages Slide. China’s stocks fell, driving the benchmark index down the most in more than a week, as waning investor interest in equities drove brokerages down and lower metal prices dragged on materials producers. Industrial Securities Co. (601377) and Soochow Securities Co. sank at least 2 percent. Zhongjin Gold Corp. paced losses by gold producers after the price of the precious metal slid below $1,700 an ounce. The Shanghai Composite Index (SHCOMP) declined 0.7 percent to 2,068.54 at the 11:30 a.m. local-time break, heading for the biggest retreat since Dec. 3.
  • Oil-to-Metals Bank Staff Retreating for Second Year: Commodities. Investment banks are cutting commodity staff for a second year and pay will probably drop for a third time as revenue declines, bonuses shrink and new regulations limit how much money traders can risk.
Wall Street Journal: 
  • Spending-Cut Proposals Drawing Democratic Flak. One big question in Washington's budget talks is whether Republicans will make more concessions on taxes. This week, the counterpoint has started to come into play: What will Democrats swallow on spending cuts? The prospect of cuts to Medicare and other entitlement programs is making many Democrats anxious. Of particular concern is Republicans' call for increasing the eligibility age for Medicare from 65 to 67, an idea that could split Democrats.
  • The Fiscal Cliff: Live Stream
  • U.S. Terrorism Agency to Tap a Vast Database of Citizens. Top U.S. intelligence officials gathered in the White House Situation Room in March to debate a controversial proposal. Counterterrorism officials wanted to create a government dragnet, sweeping up millions of records about U.S. citizens—even people suspected of no crime. Not everyone was on board. "This is a sea change in the way that the government interacts with the general public," Mary Ellen Callahan, chief privacy officer of the Department of Homeland Security, argued in the meeting, according to people familiar with the discussions. A week later, the attorney general signed the changes into effect.
  • Rocket Success Shows North Korea's Advance. Long-Range Missile Puts Pressure on Washington to Contain Pyongyang's Arsenal and Raises Worries Over Iran. 
  • Barclays Is Set to Join Cost-Cutting Crowd. U.K. Bank to Eliminate Investment-Banking Jobs as Part of Overall Restructuring; an Effort to Patch Up Reputation.
  • The Fed's Contradiction. Easier money hasn't led to more growth, so we need still easier money. Four years ago this month the Federal Reserve began its epic program of monetary easing to rescue an economy in recession. On Wednesday, Chairman Ben Bernanke declared that this has worked so well that the Fed must keep easing money for as long as anyone can predict in order to save a still-sputtering recovery. That's the contradiction at the heart of the Fed's latest foray into "unconventional policy," which is a euphemism for finding new ways to print money: The economy needs more monetary stimulus because it is still too weak despite four years of previous and historic amounts of monetary stimulus. In the words of the immortal "Saturday Night Live" skit: We need "more cowbell."
CNBC: 
  • El-Erian: Historic Fed Announcement Yet Unchanged Markets?
  • Europe Deepens Union With ECB as Chief Bank Watchdog. Europe clinched a deal on Thursday to give the European Central Bank new powers to supervise euro zone banks, embarking on the first step in a new phase of closer integration to help underpin the euro. After more than 14 hours of talks and following months of tortuous negotiations, finance ministers from the European Union's 27 countries agreed to hand the ECB the authority to directly police the euro zone's biggest banks and intervene in smaller banks at the first sign of trouble.
Zero Hedge:
Business Insider:
NY Times:
  • Study Shows a Pattern of Risky Loans by F.H.A. A new and extensive analysis of 2.4 million loans insured by the Federal Housing Administration in recent years shows a pattern of risky lending that could generate $20 billion in losses and harm thousands of the nation’s most vulnerable borrowers. By ignoring risks in loans it insured in 2009 and 2010, the study concludes, the F.H.A. is imperiling both borrowers and taxpayers who stand behind the agency.

Read more here: http://blogs.sacbee.com/capitolalertlatest/2012/08/fiscal-analyst-hundreds-of-millions-at-risk-from-facebook-slide.html#storylink=cpy
CNN: 
  • Wall Street critic Warren to join Banking Committee.
  • Google's(GOOG) maps app back on iPhone. Three months, an apology from Apple's CEO and an ousted high-ranking executive later, Google Maps made a triumphant return Wednesday night, and it is now available for download on the iTunes App Store. The app features turn-by-turn navigation, live traffic information, and public transportation directions -- all of which were missing or problematic on Apple's new maps app. Google took the opportunity to call attention to its superior mapping data.
Reuters: 
  • Opposing camps dig in on Internet treaty talks. Most countries at a conference on telecommunications oversight agreed Wednesday that a United Nations agency should play an "active" but not dominant role in Internet governance as they struggled to reach a worldwide compromise. As a marathon session at the UN's World Conference on International Telecommunications concluded at about 1:30 a.m. local time in Dubai (2130 GMT), the chairman asked for a "feel of the room" and then noted that the nonbinding resolution had majority support, while denying it was a vote.
  • U.S. lawmakers to push tax code change for renewable energy in 2013. A group of U.S. lawmakers said on Wednesday that they plan to push ahead in the new year to change the tax code so renewable energy projects could qualify for beneficial tax structures commonly used by pipelines and other energy-related companies. 
  • Clinton to testify on Benghazi report on Dec. 20. U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton will testify on Dec. 20 before the House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee on a report on the deadly attack on the U.S. diplomatic post in Benghazi, Libya, the committee said on Wednesday. The attack on Sept. 11 killed U.S. Ambassador Christopher Stevens and three other Americans, and raised questions about the adequacy of security in far-flung posts. They have also criticized shifting explanations of why talking points given to U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Susan Rice were changed to delete a reference to al Qaeda. Some Republicans have used that criticism to question Rice's suitability as a candidate to replace Clinton, if Obama were to nominate her. Republicans have criticized Democratic President Barack Obama's administration for its flawed early public explanations of the attack..
  • Syria fires Scud missiles at rebels -U.S., NATO officials. Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's forces have fired Scud-style ballistic missiles against rebels in recent days, U.S. and NATO officials said on Wednesday, in what U.S. officials described as an escalation in the 20-month civil war. The United States, European powers and Arab states bestowed their official blessing on Syria's newly-formed opposition coalition on Wednesday, despite increasing signs of Western unease at the rise of militant Islamists in the rebel ranks.
  • Berkshire(BRK/A) buyback seen clashing with estate tax push. Warren Buffett's $1.2 billion share buyback from a single unnamed investor likely helped that person's estate save substantially on taxes, just one day after the Berkshire Hathaway CEO said the rich should actually be paying more, not less, when they die. 
  • Bernanke: Fed's ability to support U.S. economy is limited. There are limits to how much aid the Federal Reserve can provide to the U.S. economy, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke warned on Wednesday as he urged politicians to tackle a year-end fiscal cliff that could derail the country's gradual recovery. "We have innovated quite a bit in the last few years, and (it) is always possible we could find new ways to provide support for the economy," he told a news conference after the Fed announced another round of bond buying to spur growth. "But it is certainly true ... that with interest rates near zero and the (Fed's) balance sheet already large, that the ability to provide additional accommodation is not unlimited."
Telegraph:
  • Britain poised to secure bank union safeguards. Britain has moved a step closer to securing safeguards to protect its banks from a new eurozone banking union, as European finance ministers neared a deal to give the European Central Bank new powers over lenders.
Bild:
  • Germany's central bank has warned the government coalition against pledging surplus interest-rate profit from the ECB and Bundesbank to aid Greece, citing e-mail from Claus Tigges, president of the bank's regional office, to parliamentary budget officials. Tigges says Bundesbank will decide on risks provisions and profit distribution. Says there is no requirement to turn profit over to the federal budget.
Evening Recommendations 
Keefe Bruyette:
  • Downgraded (CMA) to Underperform, target $28.
  • Upgraded (FRME) to Outperform, target $16.
Night Trading
  • Asian equity indices are -.50% to +.75% on average.
  • Asia Ex-Japan Investment Grade CDS Index 112.0 +1.0 basis point.
  • Asia Pacific Sovereign CDS Index 85.0 -.75 basis point.
  • FTSE-100 futures -.08%.
  • S&P 500 futures +.13%.
  • NASDAQ 100 futures +.22%.
Morning Preview Links

Earnings of Note

Company/Estimate
  • (HOV)/-.05
  • (PIR)/.25
  • (CIEN)/-.06
  • (ZQK)/.10
  • (NDSN)/1.03
  • (ADBE)/.56
  • (PAY)/.76
Economic Releases
 8:30 am EST
  • Advance Retail Sales for November are estimated to rise +.5% versus a -.3% decline in October.
  • Retail Sales Less Autos for November are estimated unch. versus unch. in October.
  • Retail Sales Ex Auto & Gas for November are estimated to rise +.4% versus a -.3% decline in October.
  • The Producer Price Index for November is estimated to fall -.5% versus a -.2% decline in October.
  • The PPI Ex Food & Energy for November is estimated to rise +.1% versus a -.2% decline in October.
  • Initial Jobless Claims are estimated to fall to 368K versus 370K the prior week.
  • Continuing Claims are estimated to rise to 3210K versus 3205K prior.    
10:00 am EST
  • Business Inventories for October are estimated to rise +.4% versus a +.7% gain in September.
Upcoming Splits
  • None of note
Other Potential Market Movers
  • The IMF/ECB press conference, 30Y T-Bond auction, weekly EIA natural gas inventory report, weekly Bloomberg Consumer Comfort Index, Bloomberg US Economic Survey for Dec., (CVS) analyst day, (HI) investor day and the (UTX) analyst meeting could also impact trading today.
BOTTOM LINE: Asian indices are mostly lower, weighed down by technology and financial shares in the region. I expect US stocks to open modestly higher and to weaken into the afternoon, finishing modestly lower. The Portfolio is 25% net long heading into the day.

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Stocks Reversing Slightly Lower into Final Hour on Rising Fiscal Cliff Fears, Global Growth Worries, Technical Selling, Tech Sector Weakness

Today's Market Take:

Broad Market Tone:
  • Advance/Decline Line: Lower
  • Sector Performance: Mixed
  • Volume: Slightly Below Average
  • Market Leading Stocks: Performing In Line
Equity Investor Angst:
  • VIX 15.82 +1.61%
  • ISE Sentiment Index 143.0 -16.9%
  • Total Put/Call .87 +3.57%
  • NYSE Arms .61 -30.87%
Credit Investor Angst:
  • North American Investment Grade CDS Index 92.93 -.75%
  • European Financial Sector CDS Index 151.75 +.32%
  • Western Europe Sovereign Debt CDS Index 111.0 bps -2.63%
  • Emerging Market CDS Index 210.44 bps -1.77%
  • 2-Year Swap Spread 11.0 -.25 bp
  • TED Spread 24.75 +.5 bp
  • 3-Month EUR/USD Cross-Currency Basis Swap -22.0 +1.0 bp
Economic Gauges:
  • 3-Month T-Bill Yield .07% unch.
  • Yield Curve 146.0 +6 bps
  • China Import Iron Ore Spot $125.0/Metric Tonne +.08%
  • Citi US Economic Surprise Index 48.5 +.5 point
  • 10-Year TIPS Spread 2.50 +1 bp
Overseas Futures:
  • Nikkei Futures: Indicating +89 open in Japan
  • DAX Futures: Indicating -9 open in Germany
Portfolio:
  • Slightly Higher: On gains in index hedges
  • Disclosed Trades: Added to my (IWM)/(QQQ) hedges
  • Market Exposure: Moved to 25% Net Long

Today's Headlines

Bloomberg: 
  • Boehner Says ‘We’ve Got Some Serious Differences’ on Budget Plan. Republicans in Congress hardened their resistance to President Barack Obama’s proposed higher taxes for top earners and called on him to propose spending cuts. Obama’s budget plan is “mainly tax hikes,” House Speaker John Boehner told reporters today in Washington. “We’ve got some serious differences,” he said. During a phone call yesterday, Boehner said, he and the president were “frank” about “how far apart we are.”
  • Fed Expands Asset Buying, Links Rates to Joblessness. The Federal Reserve said it will buy $45 billion a month of Treasury securities starting in January, expanding its asset-purchase program, and for the first time linked the outlook for its main interest rate to unemployment and inflation. “The committee remains concerned that, without sufficient policy accommodation, economic growth might not be strong enough to generate sustained improvement in labor-market conditions,” the Federal Open Market Committee said today at the conclusion of a two-day meeting in Washington. The Fed said interest rates will stay low “at least as long” as the unemployment rate remains above 6.5 percent and if inflation “between one and two years ahead” is projected to be no more than 2.5 percent. The committee “views these thresholds as consistent with its earlier date-based guidance.” The Fed dropped its earlier pledge to hold interest rates near zero “at least through mid-2015.” 
  • Greece Plans to Retire $41.5 Billion of Debt in Buyback. Greece plans to repurchase government bonds with a face value of 31.9 billion euros ($41.5 billion) from private investors including its own banks to free up aid for the cash-strapped country. Greece will pay an average weighted price of 33.8 percent of face value for government bonds maturing from 2023 to 2042 after agreeing to pay the maximum price from the range it had indicated for each bond, the Athens-based Public Debt Management Agency said in a statement on its website today. The buyback offer began Dec. 3 and ran until noon London time yesterday. The buyback was part of a package of measures approved by euro-area finance ministers to cut the nation’s debt to 124 percent of gross domestic product in 2020 from a projected 190 percent in 2014.
  • EU Lawmakers Seek Greek Swap Details After ECB Bars Files. Lawmakers in Italy and Germany are urging their governments to demand greater transparency from the European Central Bank after a court upheld its decision to keep documents secret that show what the central bank knew about Greece’s finances before its bailout. “Technocracies and kleptocracies cannot prevail over politics and democracy,” Senator Elio Lannutti, a member of the Italian Values party, said in a phone interview today. “The ECB is impermeable to transparency.”
  • Spanish Repossessed Property Prices Tumble 65% in Credit Crunch.Prices of repossessed Spanish homes offloaded by lenders this year tumbled 65 percent as a million new properties remain unsold and buyers find it more difficult to get mortgages, according to Fitch Ratings. The price decline is relative to the value of the property when the loans were made and is more than double the drop in real estate values recorded in government data. That compares with a 45 percent slump in Portuguese repossessed house values
  • London’s Dominance in Shipping Seen Threatened by EU Regulation. The Baltic Exchange, the London- based bourse whose data are used to set freight rates for about 75 percent of seaborne trade, said European moves to tighten controls over financial benchmarks may drive business abroad.
  • Unilever CEO Polman Says Europe Faces 10-Year Economic Slump. Unilever Chief Executive Officer Paul Polman said Europe is facing 10 years of economic stagnation while the U.S. grapples with the rise of an “emerging poor” class dependent on government benefits.“We are in for at least 10 years of slow economic growth in Europe, and I don’t see that changing,” Polman said yesterday in an interview at Bloomberg headquarters in New York. “If you run a business like mine and don’t assume that, you are fooling yourself. I hope for the benefit of Europe I am proven wrong, but even then we are in a better position by taking that as our starting point. The key thing is to see reality in the eye.Polman said declining consumer confidence in the U.S. has “people worried” and the recovery in the world’s largest economy will be muted, with GDP growth of 2 percent “if you’re lucky.” With 46 million people relying on government benefits to buy food, he said, “people scrape by until the end of the month.
  • Swiss Feel Jobless Chill as Axe Falls on Alpine Idyll.For decades, the town of Visp at the foot of the Swiss Alps enjoyed the steady stream of affluent skiers heading to Zermatt and the tax income from chemicals maker Lonza Group AG. (LONN) Lately, the inflow of money has ebbed. Lonza is making the deepest cuts in its 115-year history, as the drug-additive maker seeks to eliminate 400 jobs out of 2,890 at its complex in Visp. The plant employs about one in 10 of the valley’s workers, and every third person depends on the site indirectly, facility manager Stefan Troger said.
  • Japan’s Abe Set to Inherit Deepest Manufacturing Gloom Since ‘10. When Shinzo Abe was prime minister in 2007, optimism among Japanese manufacturers such as Sony Corp. (6758) was near a 16-year high. Now, as polls suggest Abe’s party will retake power in elections on Dec. 16, the Bank of Japan’s Tankan survey will probably show tomorrow that large manufacturers are the most pessimistic since the aftermath of the global recession. Sony hasn’t made a net profit in four years.
  • California Psychiatrists Paid $400,000 Shows Bidding War. The prisons raised pay to lure psychiatrists, the mental health department followed suit to keep employees, and costs soared. Last year, 16 California psychiatrists, including Safi, made more than $400,000, while only one did in the other 11 most populous states, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The jockeying between agencies for the same doctors demonstrates a payroll system run amok and chronic mismanagement, said Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, senior associate dean at the Yale University School of Management and founder of a training institute for chief executive officers.
CNBC: 
  • 'Cliff' Talks at Standstill: 'It's Getting Worse, Not Better'. Talks to avoid the "fiscal cliff" showed little progress on Wednesday, with Republicans publicly rebuking the Obama administration and one House member saying "it's getting worse, not better." At a morning briefing, House Majority Leader Eric Cantor lashed out at President Barack Obama, saying "let's stop playing games" and present a proposal to cut entitlement spending. But House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi warned Republicans against raising the Medicare eligibility age to 67. "Don't go there," she said
  • Italy’s Clown Prince: Monti ‘Needs to Disappear’. The anarchic comedian and blogger who leads one of Italy's most rapidly-growing political parties has told CNBC that Prime Minister Mario Monti is a mere "bankruptcy curator" who "needs to disappear."
Reuters:
  • North Korea's new leader burnishes credentials with rocket. North Korea successfully launched a rocket on Wednesday, boosting the credentials of its new leader and stepping up the threat the isolated and impoverished state poses to opponents. 
  • US CEOs' view of economy slips a tad amid cliff debate. U.S. chief executives' view of the domestic economy drifted down to a three-year low in the fourth quarter, with concerns about the fiscal cliff undermining their confidence, a Business Roundtable survey found. The group's CEO Economic Outlook Index , released on Wednesday, fell to 65.6 in the fourth quarter following a sharp drop to 66 in the third quarter. Any reading above 50 indicates forecast growth.
  • U.S. governors plead for urgent online sales tax authority. U.S. governors are urgently pressing Congress to pass Internet sales tax legislation in the coming weeks, saying states cannot afford to wait to collect billions of dollars from online retailers. Washington state Governor Chris Gregoire, a Democrat, and Tennessee Governor Bill Haslam, a Republican, wrote to Senate leaders on Tuesday urging them to pass legislation granting states the authority to collect sales taxes from online businesses. The letter was released on Wednesday.
Telegraph:
BBC:
  • Conservative London Mayor Boris Johnson said UK voters need to be asked in a referendum whether they want to stay part of the European Union or not. 
Times:
  • German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said the UK is leaving itself with "no voice in Europe," citing comments the minister made at a private dinner. 

Bull Radar

Style Outperformer:
  • Large-Cap Value +.29%
Sector Outperformers:
  • 1) Homebuilders +2.46% 2) Education +1.83% 3) Alt Energy +1.64%
Stocks Rising on Unusual Volume:
  • DLB, NDAQ, FMC, AET and INFA
Stocks With Unusual Call Option Activity:
  • 1) NWS 2) NRG 3) JDSU 4) ZQK 5) DLTR
Stocks With Most Positive News Mentions:
  • 1) DDD 2) FTI 3) CAT 4) PGR 5) IO
Charts: