Sunday, January 09, 2005

Market Week in Review

S&P 500 1,186.19 -2.12%

Click here for the Weekly Wrap by Briefing.com.

Bottom Line: Market action last week was poor as the S&P 500 had its worst 5-day start to a year since 1991 on profit-taking, fears over slowing global growth and hawkish comments by the Fed. Weakness in small-caps, commodity-related stocks and tech shares was the most pronounced. Volume was relatively heavy and decliners swamped advancers on the week. Most of the major indices seemed to find support around their 50-day moving-averages. From an intermediate-term standpoint, the market still appears very healthy technically. On the positive side, the steepest declines were confined to the biggest winners of last year. As well, the CRB Index fell again, the US dollar posted a significant gain and long-term interest rates were stable. Measures of investor anxiety rose on the week, but remain below levels normally associated with solid bottoms. Walgreen(WAG+8.2%), American International Group(AIG+2.9%) and Wal-Mart(WMT+2.2%) were stand-out performers in the S&P 500.

Saturday, January 08, 2005

Economic Week in Review

ECRI Weekly Leading Index 131.40 -1.79%

Construction Spending for November fell .4% versus estimates of a .4% rise and a .3% increase in October. "Construction of all types is still strong, particularly given that November was a month in which the weather did not cooperate," said Neal Soss, chief economist at Credit Suisse First Boston. The month was the fifth-wettest November in US history, according to records dating back to 1895. Construction spending was up 6.9% over the same month in 2003, Bloomberg reported.

ISM Manufacturing for December rose to 58.6 versus estimates of 58.5 and a reading of 57.8 in November. ISM Prices Paid for December fell to 72.0 versus estimates of 72.0 and a reading of 74.0 in November. "The economy was accelerating at the end of the year and into the new year," said Robert Mellman, an economist at JP Morgan. Falling energy prices "are raising real incomes of consumers and making business a little less cautious." The new orders component of the index surged to 67.4, the highest since January of last year, from 61.5 in November, Bloomberg said. The report showed commodity prices were the biggest concern among manufacturers. The CRB Index, the broadest measure of commodity prices, has declined 4.2% since the last week in November. The ISM index averaged 60.5 last year, the highest yearly average since 65.9 in 1973, Bloomberg reported.

Factory Orders for November rose 1.2% versus estimates of a 1.0% increase and an upwardly revised .9% increase in October. Orders would have been even stronger if it were not for the 32% slump in demand for defense equipment, a volatile part of the report, Bloomberg said. Without military hardware, bookings rose 2.3%, the most since March. Bookings waiting to be filled jumped 1.1%, the most since July, suggesting production will accelerate early this year and boost economic growth. "Business confidence about the economy is rising," said Joel Naroff, president of Naroff Economic Advisors. Naroff was the best GDP forecaster for the year ended in June, according to a Bloomberg survey. Bookings waiting to be filled for capital equipment, excluding aircraft, increased .6%. "Its unfilled orders that are the stronger piece of this report," said Neal Soss.

The Federal Reserve's Open Market Committee concluded interest rates were still too low "to keep inflation stable" and said rising prices may become a risk to growth, according to minutes of its Dec. 14 meeting, Bloomberg reported. Treasury securities and stocks declined on the news, Bloomberg said. Some members were concerned about potential signs of "excessive risk-taking" amid low rates, citing credit spreads and increasing numbers of mergers and initial public offerings, the minutes said. "With the economic expansion firmly entrenched, cost and price pressures are likely to become a clearer intermediate-term risk to sustained good economic performance absent further reduction of accommodation," the minutes said.

Total Vehicle Sales for December rose to 18.4M versus estimates of 16.9M and 16.4M in November. Domestic Vehicle Sales in December rose to 14.7M versus estimates of 13.5M and 12.9M in November. Toyota Motor, Nissan Motor and Honda Motor said December US auto sales soared more than 20%, leading the industry to its highest sales rate since no-interest loans restarted the market after the 9/11 attacks, Bloomberg said. "It was a lot stronger month than most people expected," said Sasha Kamper, who helps manage $65 billion at Principal Global Investors. "There really is a heck of a lot of pent-up demand out there," said Robert Hinchliffe, a UBS Securities analyst. "It's a good time for vehicle sales overall, but the Big Three just keep losing market share."

ISM Non-Manufacturing for December rose to 63.1 versus estimates of 61.0 and a reading of 61.3 in November. US services expanded in December at the fastest pace in five months, capping a record year for the biggest part of the economy, Bloomberg reported. Orders accelerated and more companies said they were adding to inventories to meet rising demand, according to the survey. Retailers' sales surged 4.6% in the week after Christmas. This gain amounted to the biggest increase in six months and helped retailers meet a December forecast for a gain of as much as 3.5% at stores open at least a year, Bloomberg reported. "Consumer Spending, fueled by expectations of sustained income growth, should continue to expand at something near the strong pace we have been seeing," said Jeffrey Lacker, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond.

The Unemployment Rate for December was 5.4% versus estimates of 5.4% and 5.4% in November. Average Hourly Earnings in December rose .1% versus estimates of a .2% increase and a .1% gain in November. The Change in Non-farm Payrolls for December was 157K versus estimates of 175K and an upwardly revised 137K in November. The Change in Manufacturing Payrolls for December was 3K versus estimates of 0K and a downwardly revised –9K in November. Average Weekly Hours for December were 33.8 versus estimates of 33.8 and 33.7 in November. Job gains for October and November were revised higher by a combined 34,000, bringing the total for 2004 to 2.23 million, the best showing since before the stock market bubble burst and the economy began to plunge into recession in 2000, Bloomberg reported. Moreover, manufacturers added 76,000 jobs for the year, the best since 1997. "We have enough job growth to continue to give us income creation, which will help support consumer spending," said Joseph LaVorgna, chief US fixed income economist at Deutsche Bank. "The economy is in good shape and it's really steady as she goes."

Bottom Line: Overall, last week's economic data were positive. Construction will likely slow in 2005, but remain at healthy levels as long-term interest rates remain low by historic standards. Measures of manufacturing accelerated into year-end and should help boost US growth during the first quarter of '05. Prices Paid should fall through most of the first-half of the year as commodity prices weaken further and pricing power remains limited. The Fed's hawkish comments had a substantial negative effect on US financial markets. However, I believe these comments were a reflection of their desire to stem the rate of decline in the US dollar. I do not believe the Fed will raise rates in '05 at the rate the market currently expects. Weaker global growth, a stabilizing US dollar and decelerating inflation readings will prompt the Fed to slow their pace of increases. The very strong gain in vehicle sales in December and good holiday retail sales once again proves the bears incorrect in their obsessive worries over the demise of the US consumer. As long-term interest rates remain low, inflation readings decelerate, income gains continue and increasing employment is sustained, the US consumer should remain relatively healthy in the intermediate-term. In my opinion, the 157,000 jobs created in December is a perfect level for the health of the US economy. Gains consistently under 100,000 would hurt consumer spending and sustained increases above 200,000 would boost unit labor costs. Since unit labor costs are by far the greatest component of inflation, this would result in substantially higher interest rates. The only real negative from last week's data was the abrupt decline in the ECRI Weekly Leading Index. I would become concerned if this index continued to decline at this rate.

Friday, January 07, 2005

Weekly Scoreboard*

Indices
S&P 500 1,186.19 -2.12%
Dow 10,603.96 -1.66%
NASDAQ 2,088.61 -3.99%
Russell 2000 613.21 -5.89%
DJ Wilshire 5000 11,629.17 -2.70%
S&P Equity Long/Short Index 1,007.81 -.79%
Morgan Stanley Consumer 583.13 -1.30%
MS Cyclical 762.97 -2.70%
MS Technology 484.65 -4.53%
Transports 171.42 -3.49%
Utilities 324.68 -3.07%
Put/Call .95 +53.23%
NYSE Arms 1.26 +5.0%
Volatility(VIX) 13.49 +1.51%
ISE Sentiment 160.00 -24.88%
AAII % Bulls 38.10 -33.92%
US Dollar 83.60 +3.39%
CRB 278.86 -1.79%

Futures Spot Prices
Gold 419.60 -4.29%
Crude Oil 45.43 +4.80%
Unleaded Gasoline 121.42 +7.83%
Natural Gas 6.00 -2.26%
Heating Oil 127.33 +1.70%
Base Metals 119.05 -5.26%
10-year US Treasury Yield 4.27% +1.18%
Average 30-year Mortgage Rate 5.77% -.69%

Leading Sectors
Insurance -.46%
HMOs -1.32%
Wireless -1.51%

Lagging Sectors
Networking -6.45%
Iron/Steel -7.06%
Airlines -13.98%

*% Gain or loss for the year

Mid-day Report

S&P 500 1,189.81 +.16%
NASDAQ 2,097.30 +.35%


Leading Sectors
Semis +1.90%
Boxmakers +1.19%
Internet +.73%

Lagging Sectors
Energy -.31%
Gaming -.63%
Oil Service -1.26%

Other
Crude Oil 45.75 +.42%
Natural Gas 6.02 -.48%
Gold 417.90 -.90%
Base Metals 119.05 +1.59%
U.S. Dollar 83.78 +.76%
10-Yr. T-note Yield 4.27% +.14%
VIX 13.27 -2.28%
Put/Call .67 -14.10%
NYSE Arms 1.02 +22.89%
ISE Sentiment 150.0 -32.43%

Market Movers

Economic Data
Unemployment Rate for December remained at 5.4% versus estimates of 5.4% and a prior reading of 5.4%.
Average Hourly Earnings for December rose .1% versus estimates of a .2% increase and a .1% rise in November.
Change in Non-farm Payrolls for December was 157K versus estimates of 175K and an upwardly revised 137K in November.
Change in Manufacturing Payrolls for December was 3K versus estimates of 0K and a downwardly revised -9K in November.
Average Weekly Hours for December was 33.8 versus estimates of 33.8 and 33.7 in November.

Recommendations
-Goldman Sachs: Reiterated Outperform on RIG, DO, SII, BHI, SLB, ROH, INTC, MRVL and LIZ. Downgraded BMC to Underperform.
-Citi SmithBarney: Said to Buy Chemicals on pullback, favorites are DOW, NCX and LYO. Remains bearish on commercial aerospace sector. Reiterated Sell on BA, target $40. Reiterated Buy on MSFT, target $32.
-CSFB: Rated AGU Outperform, target $18.
-JP Morgan: Rated LABS, PDLI and MEDX Overweight. Raised SHPGY, SYMC to Overeweight. Cut SUN to Underweight.
-Legg Mason: Rated WEN Buy, target $46.
-Banc of America: Rated HRB Sell, target $42.
-Bear Stearns: Downgraded DE to Underperform.
-Morgan Stanley: Downgraded OVNT, CNF to Underweight. Raised FDX, UPS to Overweight.
-Oppenheimer: Rated CAO Buy, target $18.50.

Mid-day News
U.S. stocks are modestly higher mid-day on strength in the semiconductor sector and a jobs report that met most expectations. US office vacancy rates dropped to 16.2% from 16.6% in the fourth quarter as more companies snapped up space, the Wall Street Journal reported. Rents were unchanged for the second quarter in a row at an annual $20.11 a square foot, the paper said. Scientists at Pfizer said they may have found a simple test to diagnose for Parkinson’s disease, the Wall Street Journal reported. A “sharp” increase in US government spending on military research programs is expected to boost total funding for research and development in the country this year, the Wall Street Journal reported. Burlington Resources CFO Shapiro told CNBC the price of crude oil may be $30-$40/bbl. by the end of the year, Bloomberg said. MedImmune has sold only about 1 million doses of its FluMist nasal spray after it increased the number of doses to 3 million amid reports of a shortage of flu vaccine, the AP reported. Crude oil prices may fall next week as warmer-than-normal weather in the eastern US cuts demand for heating fuel and refineries boost supplies, according to a survey by Bloomberg. Shares of Taser International are dropping after the company said the SEC is looking into its products’ safety and a recent order, Bloomberg reported. A growing number of Krispy Kreme shareholders are seeking the ouster of CEO Livengood, Bloomberg reported. President Bush picked former Senators Mack and Breaux to head a nine-member panel of former lawmakers, business owners and tax experts that will recommend ways to overhaul the US tax code, Bloomberg said. Tiffany & Co., the largest US luxury jewelry retailer, said holiday sales increased 12% as demand for diamond jewelry and watches rose, Bloomberg reported. The US dollar rose against the euro for a sixth straight day after Treasury Secretary Snow said members of the Bush administration “want to do things to sustain the strength” of the US currency, Bloomberg reported. US employers added 157,000 workers in December, capping the best year for job growth since before the stock market bubble burst and the economy began plunging into recession in 2000, Bloomberg reported.

Bottom Line: The Portfolio is slightly lower mid-day as losses in my security and homebuilding longs more than offset gains in my internet and networking longs. I added a few new technology longs this morning, thus bringing the Portfolio to 25% net long. One of my new longs is JNPR and I am keeping a tight stop-loss of $25.10 on this position. The tone of the market remains weak today as more stocks are declining than advancing as small-caps fall and a number of sectors are lower. However, it is a positive to see semiconductors outperform substantially. While the US dollar likely has further to go on the upside, I do not expect such a rally as to substantially damage multi-national corporate profits. I expect US stocks to rise modestly into the close on short-covering and bargain-hunting in the tech sector.

Friday Watch

Earnings of Note
Company/Estimate
BLUD/.11
SGR/.14

Splits
CCJ 3-for-1

Economic Data
Unemployment Rate for December estimated at 5.4% versus 5.4% in November.
Average Hourly Earnings for December estimated up .2% versus a .1% increase in November.
Change in Non-farm Payrolls for December estimated at 175K versus 112K in November.
Change in Manufacturing Payrolls for December estimated at 0K versus a loss of 5K in November.
Average Weekly Hours for December estimated at 33.8 versus 33.7 in November.
Consumer Credit for November estimated at $6.0B versus $7.7B in October.

Recommendations
Goldman Sachs reiterated Outperform on CZN, ACN, FORM, CSCO, GLW, MMM, MDT, DD, ROH, XOM, AHC, PFE, AGN and Underperform on DCLK, PSS, DDS, MAY, HBAN. Share of Marathon Oil(MRO) may rise more than 35% this year as the company is an attractive acquisition target for ChevronTexaco and Total SA and has "bright prospects" in Libya, Russia and West Africa, Business Week reported. Shares of Movado Group(MOV) may rise as the market for luxury goods expands, Business Week reported. Cornell Cos.(CRN) may be worth as much as $20 a share in a buyout, Business Week reported.

Late-Night News
Asian indices are mostly lower on weakness in electronics shares in the region. France may change its legal code to allow class-action lawsuits, the Financial Times reported. Boeing and Lockheed Martin rockets will be used to launch US government satellites at least through the end of the decade, the Wall Street Journal reported. Toyota Motor plans to assemble Camry sedans with gasoline-electric engines at its Kentucky plant starting in 2005, the Yomiuri newspaper reported. Adelphia Communications is unlikely to be sold in one piece to buyout firms, which may not want to pay the $17.5 billion sought by an Adelphia creditor, the Wall Street Journal reported. Avantest Corp., the world's biggest maker of gear used to test computer memory chips, received more orders in the fiscal third quarter than its $391 million forecast, CEO Oura said. The dollar headed for its biggest weekly gain against the euro in more than five months in Asia on optimism a jobs report today will bolster the case for higher interest rates, Bloomberg said. Unocal Corp. shares had their biggest gain in almost six years after the Financial Times said China National Offshore Oil Corp., China's third-biggest oil company, may bid more than $13 billion for the U.S. energy producer, Bloomberg reported. Greek shipping companies First Financial, Golden Energy Management SA, Drytank SA plan to sell shares to finance new vessels, betting that demand from China will boost freight rates after a slump since November, Bloomberg said. Oil & Natural Gas Corp., India's biggest oil explorer, is in talks to purchase assets of OAO Yukos Oil Co., Bloomberg said. GM, Ford, Toyota and other automakers recalled a record 30.7 million vehicles in the US last year, increasing costs and further diminishing public perception of auto quality, Bloomberg said. Sprint Corp. and Virgin Group Ltd. may sell shares of their Virgin Mobile USA joint venture, the Wall Street Journal reported.

Late-Night Trading
Asian Indices are -1.0% to +.50 on average.
S&P 500 indicated -.08%.
NASDAQ 100 indicated -.03%.

BOTTOM LINE: I expect U.S. equities to open modestly lower in the morning as interest rates rise on a better-than-expected employment report or worries increase over slowing growth on a below-expectations report. However, a below-expectations report may spur a rally later in the day as interest rates fall. The Portfolio is market neutral heading into tomorrow.

Thursday, January 06, 2005

Thursday Close

S&P 500 1,187.89 +.35%
NASDAQ 2,090.00 -.06%


Leading Sectors
Gaming +1.98%
Oil Service +1.88%
Energy +1.80%

Lagging Sectors
Internet -.89%
Software -1.63%
Airlines -2.34%

Other
Crude Oil 45.35 -.46%
Natural Gas 6.03 -.31%
Gold 422.00 +.09%
Base Metals 117.19 -1.29%
U.S. Dollar 83.08 unch.
10-Yr. T-note Yield 4.26% unch.
VIX 13.58 -3.62%
Put/Call .78 -16.13%
NYSE Arms .83 -27.83%
ISE Sentiment 222.00 +11.56%

After-hours Movers

Recommendations

After-hours News

BOTTOM LINE: The Portfolio finished unchanged today as gains in my networking and homebuilding longs offset losses in my steel and software shorts. I added to a few of my existing longs and shorts in the afternoon, thus leaving the Portfolio market neutral. The tone of the market weakened again this afternoon on lighter volume. Most measures of investor anxiety remain low and technology shares underperformed substantially. I continue to believe any near-term rally will be short-lived until complacency falls.