Monday, June 04, 2007

Today's Headlines

Bloomberg:
- Citadel Investment Group’s purchase of Resmae Mortgage Corp. is the latest evidence that investors’ appetite for bonds backed by subprime mortgages is returning five months after the industry crashed.
- Accredited Home Lenders Holding(LEND), the subprime mortgage lender that said in March its survival might be in doubt, will be sold to private equity firm Lone Star Funds for about $400 million in cash.
- Crude oil rose above $66/bbl. to a one-month high in NY on worries over Nigerian production and a cyclone near the Strait of Hormuz.
- US Representative William Jefferson, a Louisiana Democrat, was indicted by a federal grand jury on charges of racketeering and seeking bribes.
- Shares of Dow Jones(DJ) declined for the first time in six days amid investors expectations that the Bancroft family may accept Rupert Murdoch’s $60 a share bid for the publisher of the Wall Street Journal.
- Apple Inc.(AAPL) plans to start selling iPhone June 29, as the company prepares to challenge Nokia Oyj and Motorola Inc.(MOT) with the new combination mobile phone and iPod music player.
- NYSE Euronext(NYX), owner of the world’s largest stock exchange, was sued for $4 billion along with three securities firms for providing inferior prices for trades executed through the Big Board’s automated Super Dot system.
- Flextronics(FLEX) will buy Solectron Corp.(SLR) for $3.6 billion to narrow the sales gap with larger rival Hon Hai Precision Industry.
- Wal-Mart Stores(WMT) was upgraded by at least 4 US brokerages following its decision to buy back as much as $15 billion of shares and reduce the number of stores being opened this year.
- China plans to use hydropower, nuclear energy, biomass fuels and gas to help cut 950 million metric tons of so-called greenhouse gas output by 2010.
- China’s benchmark stock index plunged 7.7% after the government’s main business newspaper signaled officials won’t try to halt a slump that’s erased more than $350 billion of market value in four days.

Wall Street Journal:
- Palm Inc.(PALM) is selling a 25% stake to Elevation Partners, a private-equity firm, for $325 million.
- Hewlett-Packard’s(HPQ) focus on selling through retail outlets helped the company reclaim its market lead over rival Dell Inc.(DELL).
- Google Inc.(GOOG) will broker advertising for the fashion and lifestyle sites of Glam Media Inc. and some of the more than 300 blogs and Web sites affiliated with the company.

- Hearst-Argyle Television(HTV) will distribute news, weather and entertainment video to Google’s YouTube in exchange for part of the revenue from advertising sold against the clips.
- Former Tennessee Senator Fred Thompson will rely heavily on the Internet to raise money and campaign for the Republican presidential nomination. Thompson plans extensive use of blogging and online video.

NY Times:
- The Weather Channel has devoted an increasing amount of resources to covering the issue of climate change since Hurricane Katrina stuck the US Gulf Coast in 2005. The network was criticized after host Heidi Cullen suggested in a blog that the American Meteorological Society not give its approval to meteorologists who “can’t speak to the fundamental science of climate change.”
- Some Apple(AAPL) executives are concerned that expectations for the iPhone may be too high and that initial customers may be disappointed.

Washington Post:
- Lawmakers returning to Washington after a week-long Memorial Day recess are confident the Senate will pass an overhaul of the nation’s immigration laws this week.

Women’s Wear Daily:
- Jones Apparel Group(JNY) may sell its Barneys NY unit for as much as $1.4 billion after bidding by two Middle Eastern investment firms has heated up.

USA Today:
- Nuclear power is gaining renewed interest in Europe amid concerns about fuel prices, climate change and the reliability of oil and natural-gas supplies from Russia.

Wall Street Journal Polska:
- Poland will boost its wind-power capacity almost 1,000% to 2,800 megawatts within two years, citing an Economy Ministry report.

Aksam:
- Turkey’s state exploration company has found evidence of the country’s second-biggest oil field near the central town of Nigde.

al-Watan:
- Kuwait Airways will buy 12 Boeing(BA) Dreamliner 787 passenger planes and seven Airbus A320 jets to upgrade its fleet.

Arab News:
- General Electric(GE) plans to expand its business in Saudi Arabia by investing in the kingdom’s energy, water and health-care industries, citing John G. Rice, vice-chairman of GE.

Factor Orders Rise for Third Consecutive Month

- Factory Orders for April rose .3% versus estimates of a .7% gain and an upwardly revised 4.1% increase in March.

BOTTOM LINE: Orders placed with American factories rose less than forecast in April, suggesting businesses may still be working inventories down before restocking, Bloomberg reported. Orders for capital goods excluding aircraft and military equipment, a gauge of future business investment, rose 2.1% versus a 4.6% gain in March. Bookings for non-durable goods, including food, petroleum and chemicals, fell .2% in April versus a 2.9% rise the prior month. Businesses now have enough goods to last 1.24 months at April’s sales pace, down from 1.25 months the prior month. I continue to believe manufacturing has bottomed and will add to economic growth this quarter after subtracting from growth meaningfully in 1Q.

Links of Interest

Market Snapshot
Detailed Market Summary
Quick Summary
Economic Commentary
Movers & Shakers
Today in IBD
NYSE OrderTrac
I-Watch Sector Overview
NYSE Unusual Volume
NASDAQ Unusual Volume
Hot Spots
NASDAQ 100 Heatmap
DJIA Quick Charts
Chart Toppers
Option Dragon
Intraday Chart/Quote

Sunday, June 03, 2007

Monday Watch

Weekend Headlines
Bloomberg:
- Defense Secretary Robert Gates urged Asian nations to work with the US to help stabilize Afghanistan and its neighbors by promoting economic development and countering terrorism.
- Treasuries declined, pushing 10-year note yields to the highest level in more than nine months, as larger-than-forecast gains in employment and manufacturing suggested US economic growth is accelerating.
- The US dollar rose to a four-month high against the yen as accelerating US job growth and stronger manufacturing added to signs the economy is gaining momentum.
- Genentech Inc.(DNA) said adding its Avastin to a chemotherapy combination slowed the growth of lung tumors at both high and low doses in a study.
- Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan, promoting his forthcoming book, said the 1987 stock market crash and 2001 terrorist attacks taught him the most during his almost two-decade tenure at the Fed.
- Bristol-Myers Squibb’s(BMY) Sprycel stalls tumor growth in previously untreated patients with rare, hard-to-defeat blood cancers, a study found.
- Four people, including a former airport employee and a former member of the parliament of Guyana, were charged with plotting to blow up fuel lines and tanks at JFK International Airport, the US Justice Department said.
- Four men charged with plotting to bomb fuel tanks and a pipeline at NY’s JFK Intl. Airport had no direct ties to al-Qaeda though they had the “same hatred” that motivates the terrorist group, NY’s police commissioner said.
- Qiagen NV, a Dutch maker of tools for gene research, agreed to buy Digene Corp.(DIGE) for $1.6 billion in shares and cash to gain tests for a virus that causes cervical caner and sexually transmitted diseases.
- Democratic presidential candidate John Edwards said Senators Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama showed no leadership when they didn’t explain in advance their vote last month against an Iraq war funding measure. “There is a difference between leadership and legislating,” said Edwards, during the second debate among the eight Democratic presidential candidates.
- Japan’s largest companies increased spending 13.6%, more than expected, the Ministry of Finance said.
- From General Electric(GE) to Mitsubishi Heavy Industries to E.ON AG, the world’s largest companies are investing in wind power, the best-performing energy in the past year.

Wall Street Journal:
- The family that owns a controlling interest in Dow Jones(DJ) will meet with Rupert Murdoch on June 4 to discuss his company’s $5 billion bid for the news service.
- Real-estate values of US skyscrapers may peak soon because prices are rising more rapidly than the rents that buyers are able to charge.
- Behind the Bancrofts’ Shift at Dow Jones(DJ).

NY Times:
- Cadence Design Systems(CDNS) held talks with KKR and Blackstone Group LP about a sale of the company.
- Pornographic video sales and rentals fell 15% last year and are likely to decline more this year in the face of cheap video and photography software that enables easy amateur productions.
- Google(GOOG) Keeps Tweaking Its Search Engine.
- Cars Outsell Light Trucks for First Time Since 2002.

Washington Post:
- NY Senator Hillary Clinton, the frontrunner for the 2008 Democratic presidential nomination, is being portrayed as a “pragmatic Midwesterner” in the same way that her husband, Bill Clinton, was cast by his 1992 campaign as “The Man from Hope.” Introducing biographical information about her childhood and early adulthood, her advisers told the newspaper, will help counter the image of Clinton as an inside-the-Beltway careerist linked to scandal.
- Iran has increased arms shipments to Iraq’s Shiite militias and Afghanistan’s Taliban in recent weeks, citing US and European officials.

All Things Digital:
- Transcript – Bill Gates and Steve Jobs at D5.

AP:
- Siebel Systems Inc. founder Thomas Siebel pledged $100 million to his alma mater, the University of Illinois, upon his death.

Google:
- Google Maps new Street View.

Financial Times:
- Highbridge Capital Management LLC has taken on Scott Kapnick, formerly co-head of Goldman Sachs Group investment banking division, to run a new private equity arm of the hedge fund.
- The Chicago Board of Trad(BOT) plans to mount a new campaign to gain backing for its merger with the Chicago Merc(CME) after US antitrust officers have reviewed the deal, citing CBOT President Dan.

Sunday Telegraph:
- Baidu.com Inc.(BIDU), China’s most-used Internet search site, is poised to enter the European market, competing with rival Google(GOOG).

BBC:
- Mohamed ElBaradei, head of the UN’s nuclear watchdog agency, said those who want to bomb Iranian atomic facilities are “new crazies.”

Corriere della Sera:
- Russian President Vladimir Putin said his country may target Europe with missiles if the US goes ahead with plans for missile defense sites in eastern Europe.

Nikkei:
- Hitachi Ltd. and Oracle Corp.(ORCL) will begin to sell wireless IC tags in China to detect fake goods.

Economic Times:
- China’s government will soon announce new measures to cool its property market, including an increase in the supply of land, citing sources from Beijing. The government will also seek to build more low-cost housing and clamp down on illegal real estate transactions and corruption. China has steeped up measures to curb lending that’s fueling a surge in real estate prices, seeking to maintain social stability.

Economic Daily News:
- CPC Corp., Taiwan’s state oil refiner, plans to order $1 billion in equipment and controlling systems from Honeywell Intl.(HON) this year and in 2008.

China Securities Journal:
- China’s investors should be rational in considering the stock market’s recent declines instead of blaming the government’s stamp duty. The average valuation of Chinese stocks is around 50 times 2007 earnings, much higher than the average in the world’s main stock markets. The speed that stock prices have soared by is “extremely unusual,” which underscores the “structural bubbles” in the stock market. The huge price fluctuations within each trading day reflected the “weak sentiment” among investors and the fact that the trading is “unsustainable.”

The Standard:
- China’s coming collapse is not a fait accompli but there is always someone making the point.

21st Century Business Herald:
- Investors should heed the increasing risk in China’s stock market and not depend on the government to keep prices up for political reasons, citing a central bank adviser. Many investors have continued to buy shares, betting the government won’t let the market fall ahead of a national meeting of the ruling party later this year and next year’s Beijing Olympics, Fan Gang, a monetary policy committee member of China’s central bank, was cited as saying. The government should take actions to curb price increases because risk is escalating, he said. Possible tools included interest rate increases, currency exchange rates, bank reserve requirements and central bank bill auctions, Fan said.

Weekend Recommendations
Barron's:
- Made positive comments on (GE) and (BLC).
- Made negative comments on (ABT).

Citigroup:
- Reiterated Buy on (PLCE), target $78.
- We believe retail sales in May showed modest improvement over April as warmer, drier weather helped consumers return to Spring buying patterns. While comparisons remain more challenging in May than April, we believe their will be a higher incidence of sales upside to expectations versus what we saw in April.
- We favor Advance Auto Parts(AAP), Office Depot(ODP) and Tractor Supply(TSCO) as our best new money ideas in retail.
- Reiterated Buy on (ORCL), target $23.
- Reiterated Buy on (NKE), raised target to $65 from $58.

Morgan Stanley:
- We expect retail sales in May to benefit from pent-up demand for seasonal apparel following a soft April and the arrival of warmer weather. We continue to favor retailers with strong fundamentals and the ability to drive margins and returns ahead of consensus expectations. Top picks include (JCP) and (COH).

Night Trading
Asian indices are unch. to +.75% on average.
S&P 500 indicated -.12%.
NASDAQ 100 indicated -.13%.

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Earnings of Note
Company/Estimate
- (CMOS)/.00
- (FRE)/1.09
- (FCEL)/-.37
- (KKD)/.06
- (QSII)/.33

Upcoming Splits
- (TSBK) 2-for-1
- (EPIQ) 3-for-2
- (PFMG) 2-for-1
- (NGA) 3-for-2

Economic Releases
- Factory Orders for April are estimated to rise .7% versus a 3.5% increase in March.

Other Potential Market Movers
- Goldman Sachs Lodging/Gaming/Restaurant/Leisure Conference, ASCO Annual Meeting, Deutsche Bank Media/Telecom Conference, (PMTC) Global Media/Analyst Event, (PFE) Analyst Meeting could also impact trading on Monday.

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

Weekly Outlook

Click here for The Week Ahead by Reuters

Click here for Stocks in Focus for Monday by MarketWatch

There are a few economic reports of note and some significant corporate earnings reports scheduled for release this week.

Economic reports for the week include:

Mon. – Factory Orders

Tues. – ISM Non-Manufacturing, weekly retail sales reports

Wed. – weekly MBA mortgage applications report, Challenger Job Cuts, Non-farm Productivity, Unit Labor Costs, weekly EIA energy inventory report

Thur. – Initial Jobless Claims, Wholesale Inventories, ICSC Chain Store Sales, Consumer Credit

Fri. – Trade Balance

Some of the more noteworthy companies that release quarterly earnings this week are:

Mon. – Freddie Mac(FRE), FuelCell Energy(FCEL), Krispy Kreme(KKD), Quality Systems(QSII)

Tues. – Bob Evans Farms(BOBE), Brown-Forman(BF/A), Copart Inc.(CPRT), Guess? Inc.(GES)

Wed. – ADC Telecom(ADCT), Comtech Telecom(CMTL), DSW Inc.(DSW), IDT Corp.(IDT), Korn/Ferry(KFY), La-Z-Boy(LZB), Martek Biosciences(MATK)

Thur. – Analogic Corp.(ALOG), Cascade Corp.(CAE), Cooper Cos(COO), JOS A Bank(JOSB), National Semi(NSM), Neiman-Marcus Group(NMG/A), Smithfield Foods(SFD), Timberland Co.(TBL), UTI Worldwide(UTIW)

Fri. – Quiksilver Inc.(ZQK), Shuffle Master(SHFL), Vail Resorts(MTN)

Other events that have market-moving potential this week include:

Mon. – Goldman Sachs Lodging/Gaming/Restaurant/Leisure Conference, ASCO Annual Meeting, Deutsche Bank Media/Telecom Conference, (PMTC) Global Media/Analyst Event, (PFE) Analyst Meeting

Tue. – Deutsche Bank Media/Telecom Conference, Merrill Lynch Agricultural Chemical Conference, RBC Energy Conference, Lehman Brothers Industrial Distribution Conference, ASCO Annual Meeting, Goldman Sachs Lodging/Gaming/Restaurant/Leisure Conference, Morgan Stanley Data Center Symposium, (VRSN) Analyst Day, (ONXX) Analyst Briefing, Fed’s Bernanke speaking, Fed’s Warsh speaking

Wed. – Stephens Spring Investment Conference, RBC Energy Conference, Keybanc Industrial/Automotive Conference, Kaufman Brothers Digital Media Conference, Lehman Brothers Global Services Conference, Piper Jaffray Consumer Conference, BOE Policy Meeting, (NYX) Analyst Day, Fed’s Pianalto speaking, Fed’s Lacker speaking, Fed’s Hoenig speaking

Thur. – CSFB Engineering/Construction Conference, Lehman Brothers Global Services Conference, Bear Stearns Biotech Confab, Keybanc Industrial/Automotive Conference, CIBC Alternative Energy Conference, Piper Jaffray Consumer Conference, Citigroup Power/Gas/Utilities Conference, Stephens Spring Investment Conference

Fri. – Citigroup Power/Gas/Utilities Conference

BOTTOM LINE: I expect US stocks to finish the week modestly higher on buyout speculation, lower energy prices, more economic optimism, stable long-term rates, investment manager performance anxiety and short-covering. My trading indicators are still giving bullish signals and the Portfolio is 100% net long heading into the week.

Saturday, June 02, 2007

Market Week in Review

S&P 500 1,536.34 +1.91%*

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Click here for What a Week by TheStreet.com.

BOTTOM LINE: Overall, last week's market performance was very bullish as the DJIA and Russell 2000 hit all-time highs and the S&P 500 made a new closing record high. The NYSE cumulative advance/decline line also rose to another all-time high, almost every sector gained and volume was about average on the week. Measures of investor anxiety finished the week around average levels, despite exceptional gains. The AAII percentage of bulls fell to 33.33% this week from 37.35% the prior week. This reading is now approaching depressed levels. The AAII percentage of bears rose to 44.79% this week from 38.55% the prior week. This reading is approaching elevated levels. These pessimistic readings come even as the DJIA is just off one of its most prolific winning streaks in history and continues surging to record highs. Moreover, the 10-week moving average of the percentage of bears is currently 38.8%, an above-average level. The 10-week moving average of the percentage of bears peaked at 43.0% at the major bear-market low during 2002. Moreover, the 50-week moving average of the percentage of bears is currently 37.3%, a very high level seen during only two other periods since tracking began in the 1980s. Those periods were October 1990-July 1991 and March-May 2003, both of which were near major market bottoms.

The extreme readings in the 50-week moving average of the percentage of bears, during those periods, peaked at 41.6% on Jan. 31, 1991, and 38.1% on April 10, 2003. We are still very close to eclipsing the peak in bearish sentiment during the 2000-2003 market meltdown, which is astonishing considering the macro backdrop now and then.

I continue to believe that steadfastly high bearish sentiment in many quarters is mind-boggling for the following reasons:

  • the 27.8% rise in the S&P 500 in less than a year;
  • the 108.9% gain for the S&P 500 since the 2002 major bear market lows;
  • a new record high on Friday for the NYSE cumulative advance/decline line;
  • all market-caps and styles participating;
  • one of the best August/September/October market runs in U.S. history;
  • all-time closing highs this week for the Dow, Russell 2000 and S&P 500;
  • and we are in the early stages of what is historically a very strong period for U.S. equities after a midterm election.

As well, despite recent gains, the forward P/E on the S&P 500 is a very reasonable 16.4, right near where it began the year, due to the historic run of double-digit profit growth increases and better-than-expected earnings guidance in the first quarter. The S&P P/E multiple has contracted for three consecutive years. It has only contracted four consecutive years two times since 1905. Each point of multiple expansion is equivalent to a 6.6% gain in the S&P 500. I strongly suspect we will finally see expansion this year. The many bears still remain stunningly complacent, in my opinion.

As I have said many times over the past year, it seems every pullback is seen as a major top by the bears, and every move higher is just another shorting/selling opportunity. I see few signs of capitulation by the bears, and their ranks remain historically crowded given recent gains. Even most bulls seem to want the market to decline to redeploy cash they raised in anticipation of a meaningful correction. I still sense very few investors believe the market has meaningful upside from current levels and are positioned accordingly.

As well, there are many other indicators registering high levels of investor anxiety. The Yale School of Management Crash Confidence Index is showing the individual is currently the most concerned about a stock market crash since December 2002, right near the trough of one of the worst bear markets in U.S. history. The ISE Sentiment Index hit a very low 97.0 on Tuesday. Moreover, the 10-week moving average of the ISE Sentiment Index is a below-average 122.5. The CBOE total put/call ratio 10-week moving average is currently 0.93, an above-average level. Moreover, NYSE short interest has soared 22.6% the last three months, the largest three-month jump on record, to another new all-time high. As well, Nasdaq short interest has surged 22.0% over the last three months, also the largest three-month jump on record, and also a new record high. Furthermore, public short interest continues to soar to record levels, and this chart from sentimenTrader.com shows U.S. stock mutual funds have seen outflows for most of the last year, according to AMG Data Services. The percentage of U.S. mutual fund assets in domestic stocks is still the lowest since at least 1984, when record-keeping began.

There has been a historic explosion of hedge funds created with absolute return, low correlation or negative correlation U.S. stock strategies that directly benefit from the perception of a stagnant or declining U.S. stock market and economy. The equity Market Neutral hedge fund strategy, which has seen a massive infusion of capital since the bursting of the bubble in 2000, has returned an annualized 2.68% since June 2003 versus a 14.3% annualized return for the S&P 500 over the same timeframe. The immense popularity of the market neutral strategy has likely been a huge contributing factor to the record explosion in short interest on the exchanges. How long will institutional and high net worth investors pay high fees for this type of risk-adjusted return?

As well, commodity funds, which typically have a low or negative correlation with stocks, have been created in record numbers. The Dow Jones-AIG Commodity Index has only returned 8.7% annualized over the last three years, during one of the greatest commodity booms in history, versus a 13.1% annualized return for the S&P 500 over the same period. It seems to me many of the managers of these types of funds are all over major media outlets with their negative spin. Moreover, many funds that directly benefit from a stagnant U.S. economy and stock market are becoming much more active politically.

Consumer confidence in the northern part of the country, where most major investment funds and media outlets are located, remains depressed near the 2000-2003 major bear market lows. A short-sighted day-trading pessimistic mentality has thoroughly permeated the investment landscape. Research boutiques with a negative bias have sprung up to cater to these many new funds that help pump air into the current U.S. "negativity bubble." Permabears are still more widely followed than ever, despite the market's triple-digit percentage gain from the major bear-market lows. At this major market bottom, permabulls had been shunned and chastised for a couple of years. Wall Street analysts have made the fewest buy calls on stocks this year since Bloomberg began tracking in 1997. Buy calls have been trending lower for 11 months, despite the huge rally in stocks.

According to TickerSense.com, investment blogger sentiment remains very pessimistic at 46.9% bears, 25.0% bulls. The UltraShort QQQ ProShares (QID) continue to see soaring volume. There is still a very high wall of worry for stocks to climb substantially from current levels as the public and many professionals remain very skeptical of this bull market and continue to trade with one foot out the door.

I continue to believe this is a direct result of the strong belief by the herd that the U.S. is in a long-term trading range or secular bear environment. There is still overwhelming evidence that overall investment sentiment regarding U.S. stocks has never been this poor in history, with the Dow at an all-time high. I still expect the “herd” to finally begin to embrace the current bull market this year, which should result in another substantial move higher in the major averages. I still expect the S&P 500 to return a total of around 17% for the year.

It's hard to believe that, after the bombardment of pessimism, depression comparisons and "crash" calls that occurred in March, the average U.S. stock is still doing extraordinarily well this year. The Value Line Geometric Index, the best gauge of the broad market, is 10.3% higher year-to-date. Moreover, it is interesting to note that mid-cap stocks are sporting 13% gains already this year, which is the best of any market cap. Based on the action over the last three months, even more cash has piled up on the sidelines as money market funds reported this week are just slightly off record levels.

I continue to believe that a significant portion of this cash will be deployed into true growth companies as their outperformance vs. value stocks gains steam throughout the year. I am already seeing signs that this is starting to happen. As well, Chinese investors may be a new source of demand for U.S. stocks. There is massive bull firepower on the sidelines at a time when the supply of U.S. stocks is still shrinking, which makes for a lethally bullish combination. I still believe the coming bullish shift in long-term sentiment with respect to U.S. stocks will result in the "mother of all short-covering rallies."

The average 30-year mortgage rate rose 5 basis points this week to 6.42%, which is 38 basis points below July 2006 highs. There is still mounting evidence that the worst of the housing downturn is over, despite recent worries over sub-prime lending, and that sales activity is stabilizing at relatively high levels. Even after the recent slide, existing home sales are still 10.3% above the peak during the late-90s stock market bubble. About 14% of total mortgage loans are sub-prime. Of those 14%, another 13.3% are delinquent. Thus, only about 2% of total mortgage loans outstanding are currently problematic. I do not believe sub-prime woes are nearly large enough or will become large enough to meaningfully impact the prime market and bring down the U.S. economy. US economic growth is already accelerating meaningfully this quarter.

Moreover, the Fed’s Bernanke said recently that the prime market is still strong and that he sees no spillover from the sub-prime problems. As well, the Fed’s Poole said recently that, “there is no danger to the economy from sub-prime loan defaults.” There are just too many other positives that outweigh this negative. Treasury Secretary Paulson also said recently that all the signs he looks at lead him to conclude housing is near or at the bottom. Moreover, the Fed’s Hoenig, Lacker, Plosser, Fisher and Bies all made positive comments recently regarding the prospects for the US housing market. Finally, the ABX-HE-BBB-07-1 sub-prime Index, the source of much concern, has risen 10.0% from its March lows.

Mortgage applications fell -7.3% this week, but continue to trend higher with the decline in mortgage rates, rising stock market and healthy job market. The Mortgage Bankers Association said recently that the US housing market will “fully regain its footing” by year-end. Moreover, the California Building Industry Association recently gave an upbeat forecast for housing, saying production would be near last year’s brisk levels. Finally, the House Price Index actually rose .5% in the first quarter, despite recent worries.

The Housing Sector Index(HGX) has risen 26.2% from July 2006 lows. The Case-Shiller housing futures have improved and are now projecting only a 1.6% decline in the average home price through August, up from projections of a 5.0% decline 11 months ago. Considering the median house has appreciated over 50% during just the last few years with record high US home ownership, this would be considered a “soft landing.” Furthermore, the Case-Shiller Housing Index is 127.3% higher over the last decade.

I continue to believe the many U.S. stock market bears are exaggerating, in every media outlet possible, the overall impact of housing on the economy in hopes of scaring investors, consumers and the government into a panicked state, thus making the problems worse than would otherwise be the case. Housing activity and home equity extractions had been slowing substantially for over 2 years and the negative effects were mostly offset by many other very positive aspects of the US economy.

Home values are more important than stock prices to the average American, but the median home has barely declined in value after a historic run-up, while the S&P 500 has risen 27.8% in less than a year and 108.9% since the Oct. 4, 2002 major bear market low. Americans’ median net worth is hitting new record high levels as a result, a fact that is generally unrecognized or minimized by the record number of stock market participants that feel it is in their financial and/or political interests to paint a bleak picture of America.

Moreover, unemployment is low by historic standards, interest rates are low, inflation is below average rates and wages are rising at above-average rates. The economy has created about 2 million jobs in the last year. As well, the Monster Employment Index hit another record high in May. The 50-week moving average of initial jobless claims has been lower during only two other periods since the 70s. Finally, the unemployment rate is a historically low 4.5%, down from 5.1% in September 2005, notwithstanding fewer real estate-related jobs and significant auto production cutbacks. The unemployment rate’s current 12-month average is 4.6%. It has only been lower during two other periods since the mid-50s.

The Consumer Price Index for April rose 2.6% year-over-year, down from a 4.7% increase in September of 2005. This is below the 20-year average of 3.1%. Moreover, the CPI has only been lower during four other periods since the mid-1960s. Several other measures of inflation are still below long-term average rates. The Fed’s preferred inflation gauge, the PCE Core, rose 2.0% year-over-year in April versus the 20-year average of 2.5%. Furthermore, most measures of Americans’ income growth are now almost twice the rate of inflation. Americans’ Average Hourly Earnings rose 3.8% year-over-year in April, substantially above the 3.2% 20-year average. The 10-month moving-average of Americans’ Average Hourly Earnings is currently 4.03%. 1998 was the only year during the 90s expansion that it exceeded current levels.

The benchmark 10-year T-note yield rose 9 basis points for the week on more economic optimism. According to Intrade.com, the chances of a US recession beginning this year have fallen to 11.0% from 35% in January. In my opinion, many investors’ lingering fears over an economic “hard landing” still seem misplaced. The housing slowdown and auto-production cutbacks impacted manufacturing greatly over the last nine months, but those drags on growth are subsiding. For all of 2006, US GDP growth was an above-average 3.2%, notwithstanding the housing and manufacturing headwinds. Moreover, many gauges of manufacturing activity have improved meaningfully over the last couple of months. Factory Orders have jumped over the last two months by the largest amount since the 70s. The Chicago PMI has exceeded a booming 60 two of the last three months.

While the drag from housing is subsiding, housing activity will not add to economic growth in any meaningful way this year as homebuilders continue to reduce inventories and sales stabilize at lower, but still relatively high by historic standards, levels. I still expect a smaller GDP deflator, inventory rebuilding, rising auto production, increased business spending and a still healthy service sector to boost US economic growth back to around 3% before year-end.

Manufacturing accounts for roughly 12% of US economic growth, while consumer spending accounts for about 70% of growth. U.S. GDP growth came in at a sluggish 1.1% and 0.7% during the first two quarters of 1995. During May 1995, the ISM Manufacturing Index fell below 50, which signals a contraction in activity. It stayed below 50, reaching a low of 45.5, until August 1996. During that period, the S&P 500 soared 31% as its P/E multiple expanded from 16.0 to 17.2. This was well before the stock market bubble began to inflate. As well, manufacturing was more important to overall US economic growth at that time. Stocks can and will rise as P/E multiples expand, even with more average economic and earnings growth.

Weekly retail sales rose 2.3% last week vs. a 2.3% gain the prior week. The job market remains healthy, housing has improved modestly, wage growth has accelerated, stocks are substantially higher and inflation has decelerated to below average rates. Finally, I expect consumer confidence to make new cycle highs later this year as gas prices fall, the job market remains healthy, stocks rise further, home sales stabilize at relatively high levels, inflation decelerates more and interest rates remain low. This should help sustain healthy consumer spending over the intermediate-term.

Just take a look at commodity charts, gauges of commodity sentiment and inflows into commodity-related funds over the last couple of years. Net assets invested in the Goldman Sachs Commodity Index rose to almost $70 billion in 2006 from $15 billion in 2003. There has been a historic mania for commodities by investment funds that has pushed prices significantly higher than where the fundamentals dictate. That mania is now in the stages of unwinding. The CRB Commodities Index, the main source of inflation fears has declined -10.3% over the last 12 months and -14.0% from May 2006 highs despite a historic flood of capital into commodity-related funds and numerous potential upside catalysts. Oil has declined $13/bbl from July 2006 highs. As well, this year oil plunged $12/bbl. over the first 18 days of trading at the beginning of the year. Last year, oil rose $2.05/bbl. on the first trading day of the year and $7.40/bbl. through the first three weeks of trading as commodity funds, flush with new capital, drove futures prices higher.

I suspect, given the average commodity hedge fund fell around double-digits last year as the CRB Index dropped -7.4%, that many energy-related funds saw outflows at year-end. Recent reports have also indicated that institutional investors are switching from commodity funds that trade energy futures to hedge funds that buy energy-related equities. The commodity mania has also pumped air into the current US “negativity bubble.” Talk of runaway inflation, drought, world wars, global warming, a US dollar collapse, recession/depression and global pandemics, to name a few, has been fueled by the mania for commodities. In my opinion, that is why it is so easy for most to believe that US housing was in a bubble, but then act shocked when commodities plunge. I continue to believe inflation fears have peaked for this cycle as global economic growth slows to more average levels, the US dollar firms, unit labor costs remain subdued and the mania for commodities continues to reverse course.

The EIA reported this week that gasoline supplies rose slightly less than expectations as refineries remain very slow to come back online after recent “outages.” Refinery utilization is currently 91.1%, below levels seen in the same week of 2006 after the historical hurricanes in 2005 destroyed energy infrastructure in the Gulf of Mexico. However, gasoline futures fell for the week as investment fund speculation waned, and are down 22.8% from September 2005 highs even as fears over future production disruptions persist. The gasoline crack spread fell again this week and has declined 22.9% in less than two weeks, however it remains at levels seen during hurricane Katrina’s aftermath. Crack spreads peaked last August right before oil fell $28/bbl. in less than six months. It is also interesting to note that commercial hedgers, historically the “smart money”, continue to maintain their net short oil position into the recent historic spike in crack spreads, which is highly unusual. Temporary refinery “outages” are still helping to prop up the entire energy complex. However, the very elevated level of current gas prices will only further dampen global fuel demand, sending gas prices substantially lower over the intermediate-term.

Recently, the EIA lowered second and third quarter global demand growth for oil by 400,000 barrels per day. The 10-week moving-average of US oil inventories is also still approaching 8-year highs, as well. Oil consumption in the 30 OECD countries fell last year for the first time in over two decades, while global economic growth boomed 5.3%. Global demand destruction is pervasive. Over the last three years, global oil demand is only up 2.4%, despite the strongest global growth in almost three decades, while global supplies have increased 5.0%, according to the Energy Intelligence Group. The EIA recently forecast that bio-fuels should rise to the equivalent of more than five million barrels of crude oil production a day within four years. Recently, Energy Secretary Bodman said the US will likely remove tariffs to boost bio-fuel imports, which should reduce fears over a potential corn shortage. Corn has already dropped -11.3% from February highs and has likely put in a major top. Sugar, which was touted as “the new oil” by several well-known commodity bulls, has collapsed 53.2% since February of last year.

As well, worldwide oil inventories are poised to begin increasing at an accelerated rate over the next year. There is a very fine line in the crude oil market between perceptions of "significantly supply constrained" and "massive oversupply." One of the main reasons I believe OPEC has been slow to actually meet their pledged cuts has been the fear of losing market share to non-OPEC countries. Moreover, OPEC actually needs lower prices to prevent any further long-term demand destruction. I continue to believe oil is priced at elevated levels on record speculation by investment funds, not the fundamentals.

The Amaranth Advisors hedge fund blow-up last year was a prime example of the extent to which many investment funds have been speculating on ever higher energy prices through futures contracts, thus driving the price of the underlying commodity to absurd levels for consumers and businesses. This is considered “paper demand”, which is not real demand for the underlying commodity. Amaranth, a multi-strategy hedge fund, lost about $6.5 billion of its $9.5 billion under management in less than two months speculating mostly on higher natural gas prices. I continue to believe a number of other funds will experience similar fates over the coming months after managers “pressed their bets” in hopes of making up for recent poor performance, which will further pressure energy prices as these funds unwind their leveraged long positions to meet rising investor redemptions. Moreover, the same rampant speculation that has driven the commodity mania will work against energy as downside speculation increases and drives down prices even further than the fundamentals would otherwise dictate.

Cambridge Energy Research, one of the most respected energy research firms in the world, put out a report late last year that drills gaping holes in the belief by most investors of imminent "peak oil" production. Cambridge said that its analysis indicates that the remaining global oil base is actually 3.74 trillion barrels, three times greater than "peak oil" theory proponents say and that the "peak oil" theory is based on faulty analysis. I suspect the substantial contango that still exists in energy futures, which encourages hoarding, will begin to reverse over the coming months as more investors come to the realization that the "peak oil" theory is hugely flawed, global crude storage tanks fill and Chinese/US demand slows further.

Global crude oil storage capacity utilization is running around 98%. OPEC production cuts have resulted in a complete technical breakdown in crude futures, despite the recent bounce. Spare production capacity, which had been one of the main sources of angst among the many oil bulls, rises with each OPEC cut. As well, demand destruction which is already pervasive globally will only intensify over the coming years as many more alternative energy projects now in the pipeline come to the fore. Moreover, many Americans feel as though they are helping fund terrorism or hurting the environment every time they fill up their gas tanks. I do not believe we will ever again see the demand for gas-guzzling vehicles that we saw in recent years, even if gas prices plunge further from current levels, as I expect. If OPEC actually implements all their announced production cuts, with oil still at very high levels and weakening global growth, it will only further deepen resentment towards the cartel and result in even greater long-term demand destruction.

I continue to believe oil made a major top last year during the period of historic euphoria surrounding the commodity with prices above $70/bbl. and calls for $100/bbl. oil commonplace. Even during the peak of anxiety in the recent Iranian/UK hostage stand-off, oil only rose about $6/bbl., despite renewed calls from numerous traders, analysts and pundits for $100+/bbl. oil. Falling demand growth for oil in emerging market economies, an explosion in alternatives, rising global spare production capacity, increasing global refining capacity, the complete debunking of the hugely flawed "peak oil" theory, a firmer U.S. dollar, less demand for gas guzzling vehicles, accelerating non-OPEC production, a reversal of the "contango" in the futures market, a smaller risk premium and essentially full global storage should provide the catalysts for oil to fall to $35 per barrel to $40 per barrel later this year. I fully expect oil to test $20 per barrel to $25 per barrel within the next three years as the historic investment fund speculation in the commodity reverses course.

Natural gas inventories rose around expectations this week. Prices for the commodity were mostly unch. even with supplies now 20.9% above the 5-year average and near all-time high levels for this time of year. Furthermore, the EIA recently projected global liquefied natural gas production to soar this year, with the US poised to see a 34.5% surge in imports and another 38.5% increase in 2008. Natural gas prices have collapsed -50.1% since December 2005 highs. Notwithstanding this severe decline, natural gas anywhere near current prices is still ridiculous with absolute inventories poised to hit new records this year. The long-term average price of natural gas is $4.63 with inventories much lower than current levels.

Gold rose on the week, despite diminishing inflation worries, as concerns over emerging markets’ demand subsided. Perceptions of emerging market demand for the metal seem to be the greatest determinant of prices at this point. Copper rose substantially on better-than-expect US economic data and short-covering. Copper is now -16.5% lower from the euphoric highs set last year. I continue to believe the recent bounce in copper has run its course and any substantially rallies from current levels should be sold. Natural gas, oil, gold and copper all look both fundamentally and technically weak longer-term. The US dollar fell slightly for the week as traders raised short bets and economic data overseas exceeded estimates.

I continue to believe there is very little chance of another Fed rate hike anytime soon, notwithstanding the recent acceleration in economic activity. An eventual rate cut is more likely this year as inflation continues to decelerate substantially. The recent rise in mortgage rates will likely mute the rebound in housing and prevent the overall economy from growing too fast.

The US budget deficit is now 1.4% of GDP, well below the 40-year average of 2.3% of GDP. As well, the trade deficit has been trending lower over the last eight months. I expect foreign investors’ demand for US securities to remain strong. REIT stocks outperformed for the week on sector upgrades, bargain-hunting and buyout speculation. Homebuilding stocks underperformed on the rise in mortgage rates, below-expectations earnings forecasts and a weak mortgage applications report.

Current US stock prices are still providing longer-term investors very attractive opportunities, in my opinion. In my entire investment career, I have never seen many of the best “growth” companies in the world priced as cheaply as they are now relative to the broad market. By contrast, “value” stocks are quite expensive in many cases. A CSFB report late last year confirmed this view. The report concluded that on a price-to-cash flow basis "growth" stocks are cheaper than "value" stocks for the first time since at least 1977. The entire decline in the S&P 500’s p/e, since the bubble burst in 2000, is attributable to growth stock multiple contraction. Many “value” investors point to the still “low” price/earnings ratios of commodity stocks, notwithstanding their historic price runs over the last few years. However, commodity equities always appear the “cheapest” right before significant price declines. I still expect the most overvalued economically sensitive and emerging market stocks to underperform over the intermediate-term as the manias for those shares subside as global growth slows to more average rates.

The emerging markets’ mania, which has mainly been the by-product of the commodity mania, is likely nearing an end, as well. The Financial Times reported recently that China's pollution problem is rapidly worsening on their soaring investments in energy-intensive industries. According to the FT, China now accounts for almost half of the world's flat glass and cement production, more than one-a third of steel output and 28% of global aluminum production.

In my opinion, China is building for the sake of building, such as the world's largest mall, to promote the appearance of even more exceptional growth than would otherwise be the case. Massive overcapacity is being created in China. This is giving a false sense of demand for most of the world's commodities. This is the main reason why I believe long-term interest rates remain exceptionally low. I continue to believe when the manias for emerging markets and commodities end, the mild bout of inflation we have experienced globally will turn into a mild bout of deflation. The iShares Lehman 20+ Year Treasury Bond (TLT) remains a core long position for me as I firmly believe the secular trend of disinflation remains in tact.

The Shanghai Composite’s recent performance mirror’s that of the Nasdaq during the late 90s bubble. I am also keeping a close eye on the Vietnam Stock Index(VNINDEX), which has dwarfed the Nasdaq’s meteoric rise in the late 90s, rocketing 339.1% higher over the last 24 months. It is 43.8% higher just this year. The bursting of these bubbles, may well signal the end of the mania for all emerging market stocks. I continue to believe a chain reaction of events has already begun that will result in a substantial increase in demand for US equities.

S&P 500 profits have risen at double-digit rates for 19 consecutive quarters, the best streak since recording keeping began in 1936. Companies in the S&P 500 Index reported an average earnings gain of 11.6% in the first quarter(with 483 out of 500 reporting) versus estimates of a 3.5% increase before reporting began. Notwithstanding a 108.9% total return(which is equivalent to a 17.1% average annual return) for the S&P 500 since the October 2002 bottom, its forward p/e has contracted relentlessly and now stands at a very reasonable 16.4. The 20-year average p/e for the S&P 500 is 23.0.

In my opinion, the US stock market continues to factor in way too much bad news at current levels. One of the characteristics of the current US “negativity bubble” is that most potential positives are undermined, downplayed or completely ignored, while almost every potential negative is exaggerated, trumpeted, obsessed over and promptly priced in to stock prices. “Irrational pessimism” by investors has resulted in a dramatic decrease in the supply of stock. Moreover, booming merger and acquisition activity and giant corporate stock buybacks are also greatly constricting supply. Many commodity funds, which have received a historic flood of capital inflows over the last few years are now seeing redemptions as the CRB Index continues to languish. Some of this capital will likely find its way back to US stocks. As well, money market funds are brimming with record amounts of cash. As I said above, there is massive bull firepower available on the sidelines for US equities at a time when the supply of stock has contracted.

A recent Citigroup report said that the total value of U.S. shares dropped last year, despite rising stock prices, by the most in 22 years. Last year, supply contracted, but demand for U.S. equities was muted. Despite recent stock gains US stock mutual funds are still seeing outflows. Keeping the public excessively pessimistic on U.S. stocks has been one of the many bears’ main weapons. While public sentiment is still depressed given the macro backdrop, I am seeing some signs that this irrational pessimism is lifting a bit. I still suspect accelerating demand for U.S. stocks, combined with shrinking supply, will make for a lethally bullish combination this year.

Considering the overwhelming majority of investment funds failed to meet the S&P 500's 15.8% return last year, I suspect most portfolio managers have a very low threshold of pain this year for falling substantially behind their benchmark once again. Investment manager performance anxiety is likely quite elevated already this year as the major averages are one pace to exceed last year’s gains. The fact that last year the US economy withstood one of the sharpest downturns in the housing market in history and economic growth never dipped below 2% and averaged 3.2% illustrates the underlying strength of the US economy as a whole. While significant inventory led to a mid-cycle slowdown, I expect inventory rebuilding to begin adding to economic growth this quarter helping to boost growth substantially higher that the sluggish pace of the first quarter.

I continue to believe the historically extreme readings in many gauges of investor angst during the last few months indicated the US market was cleansing itself of “weak hands” at an extraordinarily rapid rate. Buyout/merger speculation, a stronger US dollar, lower commodity prices, election cycle strength, decelerating inflation readings, a pick-up in consumer spending, lower long-term rates, increased consumer/investor confidence, short-covering, investment manager performance anxiety, rising demand for US stocks and the realization that economic growth is poised to rise around average rates should provide the catalysts for another substantial push higher in the major averages as p/e multiples expand significantly. I still expect the S&P 500 to return a total of about 17% for the year. However, this prediction is looking conservative at this point. "Growth" stocks will likely lead the broad market higher, with the Russell 1000 Growth iShares(IWF) rising a total of 25% for the year. Finally, the ECRI Weekly Leading Index remained near cycle highs this week and is forecasting healthy US economic activity. The 10-week moving average of the ECRI Weekly Leading Index hit a new cycle high this week.

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