Monday, October 01, 2007

Tuesday Watch

Late-Night Headlines
Bloomberg:
- Wall Street strategists got it right when they predicted two months ago the US housing slump wouldn’t end the stock market’s five-year rally.
- The yen traded near the weakest in seven weeks against the euro as gains in global stocks suggested investors were more confident to borrow in the currency to fund purchases of assets with higher yields.
- Russian President Vladimir Putin unveiled a plan to adhere to the form of a democratic succession while dispensing with the substance.

MarketWatch.com:
- As the year winds down, market size doesn’t appear to be as big of a factor as style when it comes to successful stock investing strategies. Whether they’re small- or large-cap oriented, money managers say mutual funds emphasizing growth stocks is the way to go in coming quarters.

CNNMoney.com:
- Beware Big Oil Stocks. Some analysts say there’s a good reason shares of oil firms haven’t jumped along with crude prices: The price of oil is just too high.
- The 50 Most Powerful Women of 2007.

CNBC.com:
- Toy Retailers Upbeat About Holidays Despite Recalls.

IBD:
- Big Utilities Interested in Big Solar.

Financial Times:
- The Iraqi government reported on Monday that civilian casualties dropped by more than 50% in September, a month in which US casualties also declined to their lowest level in 14 months.
- Companies are selling US high-grade bonds in record amounts, putting the market on track for its first $1,000bn year and suggesting better-rated issuers are finding ways around the credit squeeze.

Reuters:
- Rupert Murdoch’s Fox Business Network says everyone has the right to strike it rich in American and it aims to show even the smallest investor how to do it.

Late Buy/Sell Recommendations
Citigroup:

- Reiterated Buy on (BLC), target $25.

Night Trading
Asian Indices are +1.25% to +2.0% on average.
S&P 500 futures unch.
NASDAQ 100 futures -.09%.

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Earnings of Note
Company/EPS Estimate
- (PBG)/.90
- (MU)/-.23

Upcoming Splits
- (BCSI) 2-for-1
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Economic Releases
10:00 am EST
- Pending Home Sales for August are estimated to fall 2.1% versus a 12.2% decline in July.

Afternoon:
- Total Vehicle Sales for September are estimated to fall to 15.9M versus 16.3M in August.

Other Potential Market Movers
- The weekly retail sales reports, (IRM) analyst meeting, (FISV) investor meeting, (KSS) investor conference, (OKE) investor conference, (CIEN) analyst day, Jeffries Technology Conference, Citigroup Ethanol Conference and CIBC Industrials Conference could also impact trading today.

BOTTOM LINE: Asian indices are sharply higher, boosted by financial and technology stocks in the region. I expect US equities to open modestly lower and to rally into the afternoon, finishing mixed. The Portfolio is 100% net long heading into the day.

Dow Rockets Through 14,000 to New Record, Led by Tech, Homebuilders and Financials

Indices
S&P 500 1,547.04 +1.33%
DJIA 14,087.55 +1.38%
NASDAQ 2,740.99 +1.46%
Russell 2000 824.74 +2.39%
Wilshire 5000 15,528.96 +1.38%
Russell 1000 Growth 626.15 +1.23%
Russell 1000 Value 863.03 +1.41%
Morgan Stanley Consumer 750.37 +.45%
Morgan Stanley Cyclical 1,077.44 +1.50%
Morgan Stanley Technology 677.06 +1.36%
Transports 4,909.20 +1.51%
Utilities 508.81 +1.45%
MSCI Emerging Markets 152.73 +2.16%

Sentiment/Internals
Total Put/Call .85 -22.02%
NYSE Arms .74 -40.49%
Volatility(VIX) 17.84 -.89%
ISE Sentiment 135.0 +22.73%

Futures Spot Prices
Crude Oil 80.21 -1.78%
Reformulated Gasoline 197.95 -3.02%
Natural Gas 7.07 +2.98%
Heating Oil 218.10 -2.0%
Gold 753.70 +.49%
Base Metals 248.99 -.70%
Copper 368.50 +1.24%

Economy
10-year US Treasury Yield 4.54% -4 basis points
US Dollar 77.94 +.28%
CRB Index 332.32 -.40%

Leading Sectors
Homebuilders +3.24%
I-Banks +2.67%
Semis +2.61%

Lagging Sectors
HMOs +.53%
Hospitals +.52%
Foods -.51%

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Afternoon Recommendations
Bank of America:

- Upgraded (AMB) and (PLD) to Buy.
- Downgraded (MPG) to Sell.

Afternoon/Evening Headlines
Bloomberg:
- US stocks rallied, sending the Dow Jones Industrial Average to a record, as investors speculated the worst may be over for banks and construction companies hurt by subprime mortgage losses.
- Crude oil fell $1.42/bbl. to $80.24/bbl. as speculators slashed long positions in anticipation of lower demand from refiners as margins drop to an 11-month low.
- UBS AG(UBS) and Citigroup Inc.(C), the biggest banks in Europe and the US, rose in stock market trading on investor optimism that their reports today on fixed-income losses may represent the low point for earnings.
- PDL BioPharma Inc.(PDLI), the developer of technology for cancer drugs, said it’s “actively” seeking offers to buy the company. The stock is rising 7.3% in after-hours trading.

Forbes:
- The former Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan suggested here Monday suggested here Monday that the global credit crisis triggered in August might be coming to an end.

Dow Jones:
- Despite the housing slowdown, US household net worth Up 2.1% to record $57.86 trillion in second quarter, the Federal Reserve said.

BOTTOM LINE: The Portfolio finished higher today on gains in my Biotech longs, Computer longs, Retail longs, Internet longs, Semi longs and Medical longs. I did not trade in the final hour, thus leaving the Portfolio 100% net long. The tone of the market was very positive today as the advance/decline line finished substantially higher, almost every sector rose and volume was slightly above average. Measures of investor anxiety were around average into the close. Today's overall market action was very bullish. Every sector I follow gained, with the exception of foods. Airlines, gaming, restaurants, homebuilders, construction, investment banks, banks, semiconductors, papers, steel and alternative energy all posted 2%+ gains. Small-caps, both growth and value, were especially strong, with the Russell 2000 rising 2.4%. Over the last few months, I have heard numerous investors and pundits caution that there is still more bad news to come, insinuating or outright saying that you shouldn't be buying stocks even after a 10% correction. The problem with that is that, historically, the best time to buy stocks is always when the headlines are the worst and anxiety is high. Waiting until the headlines aren't scary or until the news actually gets better is a recipe for long-term underperformance, in my opinion. Back in August, investors were once again pricing in the worst case scenario rather than the most realistic outcome. Six weeks later, the imminent recession case is still alive, but, likely, it has a few less believers. With the supply of stock still low, it doesn't take much of an increase in demand for equities to push the averages sharply higher, which is what is going on right now. As I said last month, I still think stocks are in a win-win situation. If the economy doesn't fall into recession and the Fed doesn't cut rates further, earnings should hold up well and stocks should rise. If we begin to see recessionary data, the Fed, which is already ahead of the curve, has massive ammunition to stabilize growth and investors will likely begin to price in accelerating earnings next year. This is the main reason I think any bad news is mostly ignored and positive news is bought. The latest COT report shows large S&P 500 futures speculators are maintaining their net short positions near recent historic levels -- even as stocks soar. Another bullish indication is that commercial hedgers are now at a historically net long position. Finally, the COT all-index stochastic is still at levels normally associated with meaningful market bottoms. The S&P 500 is now up 10.7% year-to-date. I still expect it to rise about 17% total for this year.

DJIA Blasting Through 14,000 to New Record High, Led by Technology, Homebuilders, Financials

BOTTOM LINE: The Portfolio is higher into the final hour on gains in my Networking longs, Retail longs, Biotech longs, Computer longs and Internet longs. I have not traded today, thus leaving the Portfolio 100% net long. The overall tone of the market is very positive today as the advance/decline line is substantially higher, almost every sector is rising and volume is slightly above average. The 10-year yield is falling 4 basis points, and the 10-year TIPS spread is down to 2.29%, as investors continue to ratchet down their inflation expectations. The U.S. Dollar Index is rising 0.23%, which appears to be pressuring oil, which is falling $1.42/bbl. The dollar is surging against the yen, which is also a positive. Fed fund futures now imply a 78% chance of a 25-basis-point cut at this month's fed meeting. I think oil has seen its high for the year and has finally started a meaningful decline that will eventually be seen as a huge positive for the broad market. Last year, oil fell $28 per barrel in less than six months, which was one of the main catalysts behind a 16.5% jump in the S&P 500 over that timeframe, in my opinion. The fundamentals for oil are even worse this year as articulated very well by ISI Group's Mike Rothman a couple of weeks ago in Barron's. Moreover, with the consumer under more pressure this year, as a result of housing, it could be argued that a substantial decline in energy prices would even be more positive for the economy and stocks this year. Global chip sales rose 4.5% in August, led by a 48% surge in NAND flash sales, according to the Semiconductor Industry Association (SIA). The SIA said PC sales have been above their forecast this year. They also said cell phone sales have been above their forecast of 10% and now expect sales to come in at 15% for the year. The Philadelphia Stock Exchange Semiconductor Sector Index (SOX) is one of today's best performers, rising 2.9% on the news. I expect US stocks to trade mixed-to-higher into the close from current levels on short-covering, less economic pessimism, lower energy prices, lower long-term rates and investment manager performance anxiety.

Today's Headlines

Bloomberg:
- Global hedge-fund assets climbed 19% to about $2.5 trillion in the six months to July, before the subprime mortgage crisis in the US sparked turmoil in capital markets, a HedgeFund Intelligence survey showed.
- Crude oil is falling below $80/bbl. in NY as speculators slash long positions in anticipation of declining demand from refiners as margins tumble.
- Texas oil billionaire Oscar Wyatt pleaded guilty to conspiracy following three weeks of trial over kickbacks paid to Saddam Hussein in exchange for the right to buy oil under the UN Oil-for-Food program.
- The last time investors bet on a decline in Research In Motion(RIMM), maker of the BalckBerry e-mail phone, the stock tripled in a year. Now the shares are near a record and two-thirds of 37 analysts say it’s still a mistake.
- BP Plc(BP), Europe’s second-largest oil company, and Australia’s Babcock & Brown will officially open their largest US wind farm in Colorado tomorrow.
- Nokia Oyj(NOK), the world’s biggest mobile-phone company, agreed to buy Navteq Corp.(NVT) for $8.1 billion to gain digital maps of 69 countries and compete with TomTom NV in the market for navigation devices.

- Homebuilders, led by Lennar Corp.(LEN), rallied as a Citi Investment Research analyst recommended investors buy the shares after a 53% drop for the group this year.
- Uranium fell 12% last week, erasing most of this year’s gain, as supply outpace demand, according to TradeTech LLC, an industry consulting company that helps set prices.
- Sugar is falling 2.3% today, the most in six weeks, on speculation that Brazil, the world’s largest producer, may producer more sweetener than last year.

Wall Street Journal:
- Wall Street is re-evaluating how to measure growth at eBay Inc.(EBAY) and Amazon.com(AMZN) – and the change is helping to send the stocks of both companies higher.

NY Times:
- Starting tomorrow at certain Starbucks(SBUX) stores, a person with an iPhone or iTunes software loaded onto a laptop can download the songs they hear over the speakers directly onto those devices. The price will be 99 cents a song, a small price, Starbucks says, to satisfy an immediate urge.

- Fatal airplane crashes have plunged 65% over the last decade. There is now about one fatal accident in 4.5 million departures versus 1 in 2 million in 1997.

MSNBC.com:
- Is Hollywood’s ‘green’ carpet just show? Industry may be serving up organic fruit, but it’s also a major polluter.

Financial Times:
- Procter & Gamble(PG) has retained Blackstone to run two separate auctions – one for Duracell and one for its remaining food assets, Pringles and Folgers, according to sources familiar with the situation.

Valor Economico:
- Mexican billionaire Ricardo Salinas Pliego is seeking to use Brazilian technology to produce ethanol from sugar cane in Mexico.

O Estado de S. Paulo:
- One percent of all homicides in the world take place in Sao Paulo, Brazil’s largest city, citing a UN study.

ISM Manufacturing Still Showing Expansion, Prices Paid Falls

- ISM Manufacturing for September fell to 52.0 versus estimates of 52.6 and 52.9 in August.

- ISM Prices Paid for September fell to 59.0 versus estimates of 62.0 and a reading of 63.0 in August.

BOTTOM LINE: Manufacturing in the US grew in September, Bloomberg reported. Stronger growth overseas and a weaker dollar have propelled exports, providing a source of strength that is boosting manufacturing. The New Orders component of the index fell to 53.4 from 55.3 the prior month. The Prices Paid component fell to 59 from 63 the prior month. The Unfilled Orders component rose to 51 from 50.5 the prior month. The Inventory component fell to 41.6 from 45.4 the prior month. The Employment Component of the index rose to 51.7 from 51.3 the prior month. I continue to believe manufacturing will help boost overall US growth over the intermediate-term as companies gain confidence in the sustainability of the current expansion and rebuild depleted inventories.

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