Thursday, April 29, 2004

Mid-day Update

S&P 500 1,120.48 -.17%
NASDAQ 1,973.20 -.82%


Leading Sectors
Insurance +.63%
Banks +.46%
Drugs +.42%

Lagging Sectors
Oil Service -2.48%
Homebuilders -2.41%
Semis -2.92%

Other
Crude Oil 37.05 -1.12%
Natural Gas 5.93 -.52%
Gold 387.10 +.36%
Base Metals 103.45 +.57%
U.S. Dollar 90.66 -.55%
10-Yr. Long-Bond Yield 4.55% +1.09%
VIX 16.35 +.37%
Put/Call .86 -1.15%
NYSE Arms 1.02 -46.32%

Market Movers
MACR +18.9% after substantially beating 4Q estimates, raising 1Q guidance and multiple upgrades.
MANT +15.4% after beating 1Q estimates, raising 2Q/04 guidance and multiple upgrades.
TARO -27.4% after disappointing 1Q earnings and multiple downgrades.
VAS -17.1% after missing 1Q estimates and JP Morgan downgrade to Underweight.
INSP -9.9% after disappointing 1Q and 2Q guidance.
ACH -6.2% on continued selling of Chinese commodity stocks.

Economic Data
1Q GDP was 4.2% versus 5.0% estimate and 4.1% last quarter.
1Q Personal Consumption was 3.8% versus 4.2% estimate and 3.2% prior quarter.
1Q GDP Price Deflator was 2.5% versus 2.0% estimate and 1.5% last quarter.
1Q Employment Cost Index was 1.1% versus .9% estimate and .8% prior quarter.
Initial Jobless Claims for last week were 338K versus estimate of 343K and 356K prior week.
Continuing Claims were 3013K versus estimates of 2987K and 3010K prior.
Help Wanted Index for March was 39 versus 41 estimate and 40 in February.

Recommendations
Goldman Sachs reiterated Underperform on TCO, LSI, STA, SYMC and QLGC. GS reiterated Outperform on AL, N, NUE, STLD, AKS, NEM, PDG, MO, AHC, ATG, AET, ACS, EMC and ATI. JP Morgan cut CUB and VAS to Underweight. ASD rated Buy at Bank of America, target $130. DOV rated Buy at Bank of America, target $50. GE rated Buy at Bank America, target $36. HON rated Buy at Bank of America, target $42. TYC rated Buy at Bank of America, target $36. MACR raised to Buy at Merrill, target $26. SPW cut to Sell at Bank of America, target $40. MANT raised to Buy at Legg Mason, target $29. Merrill Lynch cut ACAI to Sell. Jim Cramer, of TheStreet.com, thinks commodity stocks are overdone on the downside.

Mid-day News
U.S. stocks are lower mid-day on a relatively disappointing GDP report, interest rates worries and concerns over the possible slowing of Chinese economic growth. The U.S. government estimates that 41 million Americans have higher-than-normal levels of blood sugar, classifying them as having pre-diabetes and at greater risk of developing the disease, the AP reported. Microsoft is very close to reaching an agreement in its antitrust case with the European Commission, Dow Jones reported. Nokia's market share dropped to 29% in the first quarter, the lowest in at least three years, as competitors such as Siemens shipped more attractive models, Bloomberg reported. Dow Chemical, the largest U.S. chemical marker, said first-quarter profit rose more than 600% on higher prices and greater demand for its products, Bloomberg reported. The U.S. economy expanded at a slower-than-expected 4.2% annual rate in the first quarter, Bloomberg reported. Sinclair Broadcasting ordered its ABC affiliates to preempt "Nightline", saying the show appears to be motivated by an anti-war political agenda. Sinclair which owns 62 U.S. television stations said ABC is disguising political statements as news content, Bloomberg reported. U.S. Treasuries are falling, pushing the yield on the benchmark 10-yr note to a seven-month high, after a surge in measures of inflation tied to the first-quarter GDP report.

BOTTOM LINE: The Portfolio is up slightly today as my shorts are falling more than my longs. I added a few new shorts in the retail and homebuilding sectors in the morning, bringing the Portfolio's market exposure to 25% net short. I was very surprised by the very good, but below-expectations, GDP report and even more surprised by the bond market's reaction. Bond investors are focusing on the higher-than-expected inflation readings in the report rather than the actual report. This does not bode well for the short-term direction of interest rates. While the 4.2% GDP number was below expectations, it likely gives the Fed a little more room to hike rates at a gradual pace. As well, commodity prices continue to fall. Thus, the current higher-than-expected readings on inflation should be temporary and will likely decelerate throughout the remainder of the year. The semiconductor index(SOX) has now clearly breached its 200-day moving-average. This likely means more damage to the overall tech sector and the broader market to an extent. The daily drumbeat of negativity from the mainstream press has turned investor psychology very negative even as the sentiment indicators are not overly bearish. This usually indicates further downside with an eventual spike-up in fear indicators such as the VIX, ARMS and Put/Call ratio signaling a short-to-intermediate term bottom.

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