Sunday, January 16, 2005

Economic Week in Review

ECRI Weekly Leading Index 130.40 -.91%

Wholesale Inventories for November rose 1.1% versus estimates of a .7% increase and a 1.1% gain in October. Companies have been restocking to ensure enough goods are on hand after consumer spending grew at the fastest pace in almost three years during the third quarter, Bloomberg said. Inventory growth and rising demand are fueling orders, boosting production and helping boost economic growth. "Growth, particularly in consumer spending, has continued to surprise to the upside, so I think we may be back in a situation where inventory growth has been too small," said Stephen Stanley, chief economist at RBS Greenwich Capital. Wholesalers had enough supply on hand to last 1.15 months at the current sales pace. The ratio has held there since May, Bloomberg said.

The Trade Balance for November came in at -$60.3B versus estimates of -$54.0B and -$56.0B in October. The Monthly Budget deficit was -$3.4B versus estimates of $0.0B and -$17.6B in December 2003. The trade deficit unexpectedly grew in November as US demand for oil and consumer goods pushed imports to a record and exports fell as growth in Asia and Europe slowed. The imbalance with China accounted for more than a quarter of the total deficit, Bloomberg said. Tax receipts rose 16.0% in 2004 as tax cuts spurred economic growth, thus increasing corporate and personal incomes, Bloomberg said. The Congressional Budget Office said in its latest annual forecast that the budget deficit would shrink to $348B in 2005, Bloomberg reported. For the first three months of the fiscal year, the US budget deficit fell 8.9% from the prior year.

The Import Price Index for December fell 1.3% versus estimates of a .3% fall and a downwardly revised .2% decline in November. Imports account for about 15% of all goods and services bought in the U.S. The cost of imported petroleum fell 11.5% in December, the biggest drop since April 2003, after falling 5.7% the month before, Bloomberg reported.

Advance Retail Sales for December rose 1.2% versus estimates of a 1.1% increase and a .1% gain in November. Retail Sales Less Autos for December rose .3% versus estimates of a .4% increase and a .4% rise in November. Retail Sales rose 8% for the year, the most in five years. Excluding autos, retail sales surged 8.9%, the strongest performance in 12 years, Bloomberg reported. The economy created 2.2 million jobs in 2004, leading to a pickup in incomes that is likely to keep people buying and the economy expanding, Bloomberg said. "Once again the consumer proves healthier than expected, with big-ticket goods like furniture, appliances and autos leading the way," said Christopher Low, chief economist at FTN Financial.

Initial Jobless Claims for last week rose to 367K versus estimates of 340K and a downwardly revised 357K the prior week. Continuing Claims fell to 2631K, the lowest since April 2001, versus estimates of 2775K and 2850K prior. Claims for jobless benefits typically increase around the start of the year because of seasonal job cuts at retailers and construction companies, Bloomberg said. "We continue to feel that 2005 will see a sustained strengthening of the labor market," said Steve Pogorzelski, president of Monster North America, a unit of Monster Worldwide. Last year, payrolls averaged 185,920 a month. Job growth of about 100,000 to 150,000 is needed to keep pace with the increase in the labor force and keep the unemployment rate from rising, according to most economists.

The Producer Price Index for December fell .7% versus estimates of a .1% decline and a .5% increase in November. PPI Ex Food & Energy for December rose .1% versus estimates of a .2% increase and a .2% gain in November. "Inflation is still low in the absolute sense but the net of the recent data is that inflation is moving up and that keeps pressure on the Fed to keep raising rates," said James O'Sullivan, senior economist at UBS Securities. The price of gasoline fell 11.1% last month, the largest decline since April 2003, Bloomberg said. Moreover, Federal Reserve Bank of New York President Geithner said in a recent speech that "core inflation is moderate and various measures of inflation expectations suggest confidence in the outlook for price stability."

Business Inventories for November rose 1.0% versus estimates of a .6% increase and a .4% gain in October. The buildup, in conjunction with rising consumer spending, likely boosted economic growth in the final three months of the year and will help ease some of the negative impact of a high trade deficit on GDP in the quarter, economists said. The ratio of inventories to sales, a measure of how long goods remain in store at the current pace of demand, rose to 1.31 months, compared with October's record-tying low of 1.3 months, Bloomberg said.

Industrial Production for December rose .8% versus estimates of a .4% gain and a .2% increase in November. Capacity Utilization for December came in at 79.2% versus estimates of 78.9% and 78.6% in November. Gains in production of metals and computers helped push up the index, Bloomberg said. The manufacturing sector is doing very well," said Stephen Stanley. "We've seen continued strength in orders which bodes well for 2005."

Bottom Line: Overall, last week's economic data were modestly positive. Inventory gains are helping to boost economic growth and illustrate manager's confidence in the economy. The US trade deficit will likely worsen slightly before it gets better. The budget deficit should shrink this year as tax receipts remain strong and government spending decelerates. The rate of inflation will slow in 2005, with the CPI likely rising below its long-term average of 3.0%. The fact that retail sales, excluding autos, rose the most in 12 years last year is remarkable considering the negativity from the election, terrorism fears, worries over the financial health of the consumer and higher interest rates. The recent rise in jobless claims is likely the result of seasonal factors rather than real weakness in the labor market. Manufacturing has been exceptionally strong as of late and capacity utilization is nearing its long-term average of around 81.0%. The ECRI Weekly Leading Index has now declined the most in the last 2 weeks since before it began trending higher in 2002.

Friday, January 14, 2005

Weekly Scoreboard*

Indices
S&P 500 1,184.52 -.14%
Dow 10,558.00 -.43%
NASDAQ 2,087.91 -.03%
Russell 2000 617.48 +.70%
DJ Wilshire 5000 11,635.73 +.06%
S&P Equity Long/Short Index 1,006.96 +.01%
S&P Barra Growth 571.23 +.07%
S&P Barra Value 608.88 -.36%
Morgan Stanley Consumer 582.05 -.19%
Morgan Stanley Cyclical 765.78 +.37%
Morgan Stanley Technology 484.13 -.11%
Transports 167.49 -2.29%
Utilities 332.29 +2.34%
Put/Call .73 -23.16%
NYSE Arms .79 -37.30%
Volatility(VIX) 12.43 -7.86%
ISE Sentiment 157.00 -1.88%
AAII % Bulls 33.99 -10.79%
US Dollar 82.97 -.75%
CRB 283.22 +1.56%

Futures Spot Prices
Crude Oil 48.38 +7.15%
Unleaded Gasoline 127.61 +5.64%
Natural Gas 6.39 +6.85%
Heating Oil 135.09 +6.12%
Gold 422.30 +1.12%
Base Metals 119.14 +.08%
Copper 139.60 +1.90%
10-year US Treasury Yield 4.21% -1.05%
Average 30-year Mortgage Rate 5.74% -.52%

Leading Sectors
Oil Service +6.11%
HMOs +4.88%
Homebuilders +4.42%

Lagging Sectors
Restaurants -2.18%
Airlines -2.53%
Telecom -3.25%

*% Gain or loss for the week

Mid-day Report

S&P 500 1,183.37 +.50%
NASDAQ 2,082.76 +.59%


Leading Sectors
Airlines +2.04%
Iron/Steel +2.03%
Semis +1.72%

Lagging Sectors
Biotech +.04%
Boxmakers -.07%
Telecom -.25%

Other
Crude Oil 48.30 +.54%
Natural Gas 6.38 -.93%
Gold 423.00 -.49%
Base Metals 119.14 -.17%
U.S. Dollar 83.02 +.62%
10-Yr. T-note Yield 4.21% +1.17%
VIX 12.49 -2.73%
Put/Call .70 -15.66%
NYSE Arms .87 -40.82%
ISE Sentiment 134.00 -14.10%

Market Movers
CREE -24.66% after missing 2Q estimates and lowering 3Q forecast.
EPIX -29.5% after the company and its German partner, Schering AG said US regulators demanded more data before approving its scan contrast product MS-325.
CAAS +16.4% after announcing it has signed a technology licensing agreement with Korea Delphi Automotive Systems to manufacture and export its M150/M200 model automotive steering systems.
NX +11.2% after boosting 1Q estimates.
ASKJ +9.1% on Piper Jaffray upgrade to Outperform.
AIT +12.8% after beating 2Q estimates and raising 3Q forecast.
GMTN -16.6% after cutting 4Q forecast.

Economic Data
Producer Price Index for December fell .7% versus estimates of a .1% fall and a .5% increase in November.
PPI Ex Food & Energy for December rose .1% versus estimates of a .2% increase and a .2% gain in November.
Business Inventories for November rose 1.0% versus estimates of a .6% increase and a .4% rise in October.
Industrial Production for December rose .8% versus estimates of a .4% gain and a .2% increase in November.
Capacity Utilization for December came in at 79.2% versus estimates of 78.9% and an upwardly revised 78.6% in November.

Recommendations
-Goldman Sachs: Reiterated Outperform on HD and BAX. Reiterated Underperform on BE.
-Banc of America: Upgraded NOVL to Buy, target $8.50. Rated LLY Buy, target $67. Rated WYE Buy, target $46. Rated SGP Sell, target $17.
-Citi SmithBarney: Upgraded ELOS to Buy, target $37. Upgraded RSAS to Buy.
-CSFB: Raised STX to Outperform.
-JP Morgan: Cut JTX, KSS to Underweight. Raised RA, AMB to Overweight. Rated NINE Overweight.
-UBS: Raised FLEX to Buy, target $17. Raised KNX to Buy, target $28. Rated OS Buy, target $26.
-Deutsche Bank: Rated VSEA Buy, target $39. Rated SPRT Buy, target $9. Raised ABX to Buy, target $26.50.
-Thomas Weisel: Rated CPC Outperform.
-Morgan Stanley: Raised DISH to Overweight, target $40.
-Prudential: Rated NWAC Overweight, target $16. Rated LUV Overweight, target $22. Rated JBLU Overweight, target $28. Rated DAL Underweight, target $9. Rated AMR Overweight, target $17. Rated AAI Overweight, target $15. Cut UST to Underweight, target $40.
-Legg Mason: Rated AOC Sell.
-Merrill Lynch: Raised DIS to Buy, target $35.

Mid-day News
U.S. stocks are modestly higher mid-day on good economic data and a technical bounce after yesterday’s sell-off. Marsh & McLennan offered to pay $600 million to settle allegations of contract bid-rigging, the Wall Street Journal said. Boeing will end production of its 717 short-haul airliner after completing outstanding orders for the 117-seat jet, the Wall Street Journal reported. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac earned about $4 billion last year through guarantees fees, at the expense of millions of homeowners, the Wall Street Journal said. Cosmetics makers Revlon, L’Oreal SA and Unilever Plc said they no longer use phthalates in their products, because of concern that the chemicals may be harmful to health, the Wall Street Journal reported. US trade and budget deficits are unlikely to slow efforts by the Bush administration to tackle meaningful reform of the tax code and Social Security, the Wall Street Journal reported. A new US law that requires employers to destroy papers containing personal information of workers such as nannies may boost sales of shredding machines, USA Today reported. Harvard University has hired 2004 graduate Zac Corker, who helped create a Web site that posts party information, drinking-game rules and tips on how to unhook a bra, as its new social programmer to help students unwind, the Boston Herald reported. The NY Metropolitan Transportation Authority will start operating its first computer-run subways in July on the L line, the NY Times reported. Hewlett-Packard will combine its printing and personal computer units and said Executive Vice President Duane Zitzner, who ran the PC group, left the company, Bloomberg reported. Shares of Verizon Communications fell for the 13th consecutive day amid concern by some investors that cable and wireless companies will win local-calling customers, Bloomberg said. Merck and Johnson & Johnson provided an “adequate rationale” for selling the cholesterol medication Mevacor without a doctor’s prescription, Bloomberg reported. US industrial production increased more than expected in December, making last year the busiest for factories, mines and utilities since 2000, Bloomberg said. US wholesale prices fell a larger-than-expected .7% last month, the biggest decline since April 2003 and led by falling energy costs, Bloomberg reported. The US dollar is gaining against the euro after a Fed official said policy makers may drop their plan to lift interest rates at a “measured” pace “at some point,” Bloomberg said.

Bottom Line: The Portfolio is slightly higher mid-day on gains in my homebuilding longs and software shorts. I have not traded today and the Portfolio remains 25% net long. The tone of the market is better today, however volume is lighter and most measures of investor anxiety are falling. The homebuilders’ ability to add to yesterday’s gains with long-term interest rates rising today is a positive for the group. I continue to believe the Fed is trying to jawbone the dollar and do not expect an accelerated pace of rate hikes. I expect US stocks to trade mixed-to-weaker into the close.

Friday Watch

Earnings of Note
Company/Estimate
BBT/.76

Splits
None of note.

Economic Data
Producer Price Index for December estimated down .1% versus a .5% increase in November.
PPI Ex Food & Energy for December estimated to rise .2% versus a .2% increase in November.
Business Inventories for November estimated up .6% versus a .2% increase in October.
Industrial Production for December estimated up .4% versus a .2% increase in November.
Capacity Utilization for December estimated at 78.9% versus 78.7% in November.

Recommendations
Goldman Sachs reiterated Outperform on MSFT and RE. Goldman said restrictions for the American Jobs Creation Act repatriation provision include: share buybacks, dividend payments to shareholders, portfolio investments or payment of taxes. Important permitted uses include: debt repayment, research and development, employee benefit plan contributions, acquisition of intangible property including patent rights, advertising and marketing and certain acquisitions. Goldman also thinks payment of tort liabilities could be included.

Late-Night News
Asian indices are mostly higher, led by technology stocks in the region. Rio Tinto, the biggest supplier of iron ore to Japan, has asked Nippon Steel to pay 50% more for the material, the Nihon Keizai newspaper reported. International Data Group's venture capital unit in China will open a $150 million venture capital fund in February to invest in consumer Web services, digital media and software companies, Business Week reported. China's State Administration of Radio, Film and Television is keeping curbs on foreign investment in media by restricting overseas companies to one venture in film production and in television, South China Morning Post reported. St. Louis Federal Reserve Bank President William Poole said the central bank will eventually have to drop its commitment to increasing interest rates at a "measured" pace, Reuters reported. Corporate information technology budgets may show their biggest increase since 2001, rising by an average 2.5% this year, the Financial Times said. Howard Dean paid Jerome Armstrong and Markos Zuniga, who publish the political blogs MyDD and DailyKos, $12,000 each to promote his unsuccessful Democratic presidential nomination campaign on their sites last year, the Wall Street Journal reported. China's crude oil demand may expand at a rate of 6.4% this year, down from 14.2% last year, Xinhua news agency reported. President Bush said his administration has a "strong dollar policy" and is confident foreign investors will continue to find America a good place to invest, USA Today reported. Viacom's CBS unit may cancel "60 Minutes Wednesday," which aired the discredited report on President Bush's National Guard record, when the television season ends in May, the NY Times reported. Samsung Electronics, Asia's biggest electronics maker by market value, said profit in the final three months of 2004 fell for the first time in six quarters as prices of mobile phones, flat-panel displays and chips dropped, Bloomberg said. The threat of terrorist attacks in Indonesia prompted the U.S. to issue an alert to its citizens and the U.K. to close its embassy and consulate offices in the capital, Jakarta, Bloomberg reported.

Late-Night Trading
Asian Indices are -.25%. to +1.0% on average.
S&P 500 indicated +.07%.
NASDAQ 100 indicated +.10%.

BOTTOM LINE: I expect U.S. equities to open modestly higher on strength in Asia, lower interest rates and a bounce from today's sell-off. However, stocks may fall later in the day on worries over too many Fed rate hikes and higher energy prices. The Portfolio is 25% net long heading into tomorrow.

Thursday, January 13, 2005

Thursday Close

S&P 500 1,177.45 -.86%
NASDAQ 2,070.56 -1.05%


Leading Sectors
Homebuilders +1.86%
Oil Service +1.76%
Iron/Steel +1.71%

Lagging Sectors
Biotech -1.65%
Drugs -1.69%
Airlines -2.94%

Other
Crude Oil 47.90 -.29%
Natural Gas 6.54 +1.55%
Gold 425.60 +.12%
Base Metals 119.34 -.95%
U.S. Dollar 82.51 +.41%
10-Yr. T-note Yield 4.17% -1.48%.
VIX 12.84 +2.23%
Put/Call .83 -8.79%
NYSE Arms 1.47 +77.11%
ISE Sentiment 156.00 -6.02%

After-hours Movers
CREE -22.01% after missing 2Q estimates and lowering 3Q forecast.
SUNW -4.15% after missing 2Q revenue estimates.

Recommendations
Goldman Sachs expects VRTS to beat consensus revenue and eps estimates for December quarter. Goldman thinks steel stocks are oversold, favorites are STLD, NUE and X. UBS rated AMAT, KLAC, LRCX and VSEA Buy. GenCorp Inc.(GY), a maker of aerospace components, may face more takeover bids as investors focus on assets that include undeveloped land, Business Week reported. Spectrum Pharmaceuticals may see its shares climb as it seeks to introduce a generic version of GlaxoSmithKline’s Imitrex migraine drug, Business Week reported. Bandag’s(BDG) sales growth may benefit from last year’s acquisition of Speedco, Business Week reported.

After-hours News
U.S. stocks finished lower today, spurred by a late-afternoon sell-off on increased worries over economic growth. After the close, Mahmoud Abbas, the newly elected Palestinian leader, said he will work to implement the conditions of the internationally backed “road map” peace plan and called on Israel to reciprocate, the AP reported. European online advertisement is increasing at an average of 24% a year, with the biggest increases in Sweden, France and the Netherlands, the Financial Times reported. The European Parliament has voted in favor of beginning the process that will lead to Ukraine becoming a member of the European Union, the Financial Times said. The tsunami disaster in southern Asia and eastern Africa “devastated” the fishing industry in the region, destroying docks, boats and ice plants, Bloomberg reported. The US Treasury Department said companies can’t use foreign profit returned to the US during a one-year tax holiday to repurchase shares or pay dividends to shareholders, Bloomberg said. Molson Inc. will increase its special dividend to shareholders by 67% as part of their transaction with Adolph Coors, Bloomberg reported. General Motors plans two-thirds of its future growth in emerging markets such as China, Brazil and Russia after competition from Toyota Motor and other rivals limited gains in the US and Europe, Bloomberg said. Microsoft’s control over how information is presented on the Web may be challenged by the success of Mozilla’s Firefox Web browser, Business Week said. Taiwan’s five makers of flat-panel displays may have combined losses in the fourth-quarter of more than $314 million as product prices drop, the Commercial Times reported. Taiwan’s four largest computer makers can’t get enough Intel processors for desktop computers or graphics chips from ATI Technologies and Nvidia Corp., the Commercial Times reported.

BOTTOM LINE: The Portfolio finished unchanged today as gains in my homebuilding and wireless longs offset losses in my steel and chemical shorts. I exited a number of longs in the afternoon as they hit stop-losses and added a few new shorts, thus bringing the Portfolio’s market exposure to 25% net long. One of my new shorts is WBSN and I am using a $53 stop-loss on this position. The tone of the market weakened significantly in the final hour of trading as the advance/decline line fell to it lows for the day and volume picked up. The slide seemed to coincide with the announcement from the Treasury Department regarding profit repatriation. Measures of investor anxiety mostly rose, but are still not at levels normally associated with a durable bottom. Interest rates fell substantially today and should continue to fall modestly in the intermediate-term as measures of inflation decelerate, the US dollar stabilizes and worries over global economic growth worsen.

Mid-day Report

S&P 500 1,185.43 -.19%
NASDAQ 2,087.77 -.23%


Leading Sectors
Oil Service +2.17%
Iron/Steel +2.06%
Boxmakers +1.92%

Lagging Sectors
Drugs -.91%
Telecom -1.21%
Airlines -2.05%

Other
Crude Oil 48.00 +3.52%
Natural Gas 6.41 +7.69%
Gold 425.00 -.38%
Base Metals 119.34 -.95%
U.S. Dollar 82.44 +.33%
10-Yr. T-note Yield 4.19% -.92%
VIX 12.53 -.24%
Put/Call .75 -17.58%
NYSE Arms 1.23 +48.19%
ISE Sentiment 139.00 -16.27%

Market Movers
AAPL +8.2% after substantially beating 1Q estimates, raising 2Q outlook and multiple upgrades.
TASR +25.1% after the US Defense Department said it supports Taser’s argument its stun guns are generally safe and a study in the Pacing and Clinical Electrophysiology Journal states its guns are unlikely to cause heart problems.
VRST +55.9% after saying it agreed to be purchased by Cadence Design for $285.7 million in cash.
HLIT +20.2% after boosting 4Q sales estimates.
LCBM +26.3% after beating 2Q estimates and raising ’05 guidance.
TKR +9.2% after raising 4Q and 04 estimates.
ABMD -16.4% after lowering 3Q estimates.
KCP -8.08% after cutting 4Q estimates and re-affirming 05 guidance.

Economic Data
Import Price Index for December fell 1.3% versus estimates of a .3% decrease and a downwardly revised .2% fall in November.
Advance Retail Sales for December rose 1.2% versus estimates of a 1.1% increase and a .1% gain in November.
Retail Sales Less Autos for December rose .3% versus estimates of a .4% increase and a .4% gain in November.
Initial Jobless Claims for last week were 367K versus estimates of 340K and 357K the prior week.
Continuing Claims were 2631K versus estimates of 2775K and 2850K prior.

Recommendations
-Goldman Sachs: Reiterated Outperform on STZ, FSH, AMX, BLS, CZN, MCK and SBC. Reiterated Underperform on MKL, FHCC, CVH, T and LVLT.
-Banc of America: Upgraded AAPL to Buy, target $85. Rated CHD Sell, target $28.
-JP Morgan: Reiterated Overweight on RL, target $49. Cut KWD to Underweight. Raised FOSL to Overweight.
UBS: Rated AFR Buy, target $16.50. Rated GR Buy, target $37.
CSFB: Rated DTV Outperform, target $20. Rated FON Outperform, target $28. Rated NXTL Outperform, target $35. Rated T Underperform, target $15.
Prudential: Raised VCI to Overweight, target $42. Raised AAPL to Overweight, target $93.
Legg Mason: Rated IWA Buy, target $22.50.
Merrill Lynch: Raised AXCA to Buy, target $25.

Mid-day News
U.S. stocks are modestly lower mid-day as energy prices rise and worries continue over slowing growth persist. Charles Schwab lowered the asset requirement for avoiding service fees on some accounts, in hopes of attracting more clients, the Wall Street Journal said. Ubisoft Entertainment SA, make of “Tom Clancy’s Splinter Cell” video game, is considering several defenses against a possible takeover by Electronic Arts, the Wall Street Journal reported. US company directors have become nervous that agreements by former directors of WorldCom and Enron to pay $31 million to settle suits over accountability for corporate frauds may increase their own liabilities, the Wall Street Journal reported. GM’s finance unit is altering its borrowing plans in case its credit rating falls below investment grade, the Financial Times reported. Cendant Corp. is speeding up plans to sell its marketing services unit for about $3 billion, the NY Post reported. China’s steel exports more than doubled to a record 14.23 million metric tons in 2004 from a year earlier, the Tex Report said. EBay plans to increase some of the prices it charges on its EBay and EBay Motors Web sites on Feb. 18 as it experiences higher demand, the Wall Street Journal reported. Georgia’s Cobb County school system was ordered to remove stickers place inside science textbooks that say evolution is a “theory, not a fact,” the Atlanta Journal Constitution reported. Wal-Mart Stores will begin an advertising campaign to counter criticism that it pays workers too little, Bloomberg reported. Owens Corning, driven into bankruptcy by personal injury lawsuits, is set to find out what it will cost to settle hundreds of thousands of claims, Bloomberg reported. Bayer AG, Germany’s second-largest drug company, will pare its research and development budget for a third straight year to the lowest since 1997, Bloomberg said. The euro fell against the dollar and yen after European Central Bank President Trichet said inflation pressures in the 12-nation region have diminished, Bloomberg said. Merk’s Mevacor cholesterol drug should require a doctor’s prescription to ensure an effective dose and prevent kidney damage, physicians said before a US government meeting today on the company’s request to sell the medication over the counter, Bloomberg reported. RadioShack Corp. said Leonard Roberts will step aside as CEO in May when President and COO Edmondson takes over, Bloomberg said. US Homeland Security Chief Ridge said the country will begin a pilot program using eye scans to expedite travelers through NY’s John F. Kennedy airport as it looks to limit security checks on low-risk flyers, Bloomberg reported. Newly elected Palestinian Authority President Abbas said he’s serious about implementing the US-backed “road map” to peace with Israel, Bloomberg said. US Treasury notes rose after government reports showed the prices of goods imported to the US fell and first-time jobless claims rose, Bloomberg reported. Nine vendors for a US unit of Netherlands-based Royal Ahold NV, the world’s fourth largest retailer, were charged with helping company executives inflate earnings by more than $800 million, Bloomberg said. Crude oil is rising to a six-week high on forecasts that colder weather will move into the eastern US next week, bolstering demand for heating fuel, Bloomberg said. Sales at US retailers rose 1.2% in December, the most in three months, as incentives boosted auto purchases and lower gasoline prices left shoppers with more to spend on furniture and holiday gifts, Bloomberg reported.

Bottom Line: The Portfolio is higher mid-day on gains in my homebuilding and wireless longs. I have not traded and the Portfolio is still 75% net long. The tone of the market is improved today, notwithstanding small losses in the major indices. The advance/decline line is negative, however much improved from recent sell-offs and a number of sectors are gaining. Small-caps and commodity-related stocks are outperforming. I expect crude prices to top over the next few days and begin heading to around $35/bbl. sometime in the first half of 05 on ample supply, decelerating demand and a stabilizing US dollar. I look for US stocks to trade modestly higher into the close.