Monday, May 02, 2005

Today's Headlines

Bloomberg:
- GM, after selling an average of about $13.5 billion of unsecured bonds annually for the past decade, may stay out of the market this year as investors demand yields typically paid by companies with credit ratings five levels lower.
- Obesity is growing fastest among people in households that earn more than $60,000 a year, reversing a trend of higher rates of obesity among the poor, according to a study for the American Heart Assoc.
- Crude oil fell to a two-month low this morning amid speculation that slower economic growth in the US, Europe and Japan and increased output will bolster stockpiles.

Wall Street Journal:
- Oracle isn’t in talks now to buy Siebel Systems.
- The US newspaper industry may face the steepest decline in readership in more than 10 years when circulation figures are released today.
- News Corp.’s Fox News, ABC, CBS and NBC face a challenge for young viewers from Univision Communications, the largest US Spanish-language television and radio broadcaster.
- Texans are giving up their longstanding fondness for SUVs, as the cost of filling them up reaches almost $100.
- Slower growth in Europe, Japan and Canada is expected to push US exports below 2004 levels, citing economists.
- Brazil refused $40 million in US grants to fight AIDS because of a clause requiring recipients to discourage prostitution.

NY Times:
- Dominion Resources and Exelon Corp. are among power companies planning to build nuclear reactors as rising natural gas prices make other energy sources more expensive.
- McDonald’s, Kraft Foods and PepsiCo are among companies that have hired more than two dozen nutrition experts and scientists for their advisory boards, as food companies have been threatened with lawsuits over diet-related illnesses.
- Penalties against US companies that repeatedly commit workplace safety violations may rise as government agencies coordinate to apply laws often used to prosecute white-collar criminals.
- Verizon may raise its $7.6 billion offer for MCI Inc. if MCI agrees to state publicly that some of its customers are against Qwest’s competing offer.
- GM’s Saturn and Hummer brands and Ford’s Volvo division are among the growing number of automaker units led by women.
- Novell said that it purchased a set of electronic commerce patents in a bankruptcy auction on Dec. 6.

NY Post:
- AOL Music has signed a sponsorship agreement with GM’s Chevrolet, the online service’s largest advertising deal.

Boston Globe:
- Executives of medical device companies in Massachusetts said they plan to hire as many as 5,000 people within three years.

Financial Times:
- High oil prices have reduced the incentive for divestments in the North Sea oil business and companies are now developing assets rather than selling them.

Le Parisien:
- France’s Industry Minister Devedjian said EU countries should sell some of their oil reserves when speculators boost prices.

eHomeday.com:
- New home prices in Shanghai, China’s biggest commercial city, fell last month after the government raised interest rates and tightened rules for mortgages.

Construction Booming, ISM Still Healthy

- Construction Spending for March rose .5% versus estimates of a .3% increase and an upwardly revised .5% increase in February.
- ISM Manufacturing for April fell to 53.3 in April versus estimates of 55.0 and a reading of 55.2 in March.
- ISM Prices Paid for April fell to 71.0 versus estimates of 71.2 and a reading of 73.0 in March.

Bottom Line: The rise in construction spending to a record $1.052 trillion annual rate was driven by increased work on new homes, factories and commercial buildings. Construction spending has risen every month since January of last year, the best performance on record. The record pace of new home sales and rising builder backlogs will spur further gains in construction. This should cushion any economic weakness over the coming months. For the first quarter, construction is up 9.3%(YoY).

The modest decline in the ISM should have been anticipated after the GDP report. The production index component of the ISM, a measure of the work being performed, actually rose to 56.7 versus estimates of 56.5. As well, the new export orders component of the index rose to 57.2 from 55.4. Considering the rise in commodity prices during the first part of the year, the decline in the prices paid index is a big positive and corresponds with the drop in the Chicago Purchasing Manager’s prices paid component. The first quarter rise in inventories may limit factory demand over the next few months.

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Monday Watch

Weekend Headlines
Bloomberg:
- French voters planning to endorse the EU constitution in a referendum May 29 regained the lead against opponents of the proposed treaty for the first time in more than a month, a poll by TNS-Sofres showed.
- Wal-Mart Stores said US sales rose about .9% in April as shoppers bought more food.
- Berkshire Hathaway Chairman Warren Buffett is maintaining his bet against the US dollar after his company had about $310 million in first-quarter losses from his foreign currency bets.
- Warren Buffett praised Maurice "Hank" Greenberg, the ousted CEO of AIG, and defended the use of a type of reinsurance that has come under regulatory scrutiny.
- Warren Buffett, who campaigned for John Kerry, said he opposes President Bush's plan for small private accounts as part of the solution to the Social Security problem.
- Asian technology stocks, the region's worst performers in the past year, may rebound as forecasts by companies such as Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing and Elpida Memory show an industry-wide slump may be ending.
- Morgan Stanley said its board decided to keep Philip J. Purcell as Chairman and CEO, rejecting demands by former executives that he be ousted.
- Crude oil feel to a two-month low on speculation slower economic growth in the US, Europe and Japan and an increase in inventories will curb demand.
- North Korea's reported missile launch yesterday may be an effort to force the US into direct talks over the communist country's nuclear program.
- AIG prolonged a review of improper accounting and said corrections will lower its net worth by about $2.7 billion, $1 billion more than an earlier estimate.

Wall Street Journal:
- Washington Mutual received a letter from NY Attorney General Spitzer in connection with an investigation into mortgage lending practices.
- Private-equity firms Warburg Pincus and Texas Pacific Group are close to an agreement to buy retailer Neiman Marcus Group for $100 a share, or about $5 billion.

New York Times:
- Managers at AIG artificially boosted sales by booking insurance premiums before clients have formally agreed to purchase them.
- China's yuan appreciated for about 20 minutes yesterday to the strongest in a decade, boosting speculation the country's government may allow the currency to trade more freely.
- John Wiley & Sons doubled the initial printing of an unauthorized biography of Apple Computer's Steve Jobs to 100,000 because of increased interest in the book, "iCon: Steve Jobs, The Greatest Second Act in the History of Business."

Washington Post:
- US reports of credible terrorist threats against domestic targets have decreased by as much as 50% on average and are at their lowest level since before Sept. 11, 2001.

Rocky Mountain News:
- Lockheed Martin's Space Systems may win part of a $500 million contract to design and build the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's Mars Telecommunications Orbiter.

LA Times:
- Walt Disney is introducing interactive attractions at its theme parks designed to appeal to children raised on computer games, digital effects and mobile phones.

MLB.Com:
- Baseball commissioner Bud Selig wants a player caught using steroids for the first time to receive a 50-game suspension.

Newsweek:
- Billionaire Ken Langone expects to deliver the details of his proposal to buy the NYSE this week.

Sunday Times:
- Marconi Corp. is accelerating efforts to sell itself to a US, European or Chinese competitor.

Nihon Keizai:
- Toyota Motor will start producing Camry cars that run on both gasoline and battery-supplied electricity in the US next year.

Times of London:
- UK Prime Minister Toy Blair is headed for a majority of between 90 and 100 seats in the May 5 general election.

Estado de S. Paulo:
- Saudi Arabia is ready to use its spare capacity of 1.5 million barrels a day to ease prices when needed, said Abdallah S. Jum'ah, chief executive of Saudi Aramco.

Financial Mail:
- IBM will next month cut 15,000 jobs across Europe as part of a companywide reorganization.

Xinhua News Agency:
- China's phone-revenue growth slowed to 8.8% in the first quarter after companies offered cheaper rates amid competition.

South China Morning Post:
- Walt Disney is considering opening a theme park in India.

El Pais:
- Sun Microsystems plans to acquire companies to boost revenue, citing an interview with CEO Scott McNealy.

Weekend Recommendations
Bulls and Bears:
- Had guests that were positive on PA, MOT, JNPR, CSCO and mixed on FDG, EBAY, MXIM, CMCSA, SBUX, HPQ.

Forbes on Fox:
- Had guests that were positive on SIRI, F, AW, NOVL, FEIC and SMMX.

Cashin' In:
- Had guests that were positive on CP, DYN, UPS, EBAY, mixed on BA, NKE, ERTS and negative on DTPI.

Cavuto on Business:
- Had guests that were positive on WLP, RAD, VZ and mixed on GLW, EEM and ABB.

Barron's:
- Had positive comments on SOV, NWS, IACI, AZR, IGT and HLT.
- Had negative comments on TM and SHRP.

Goldman Sachs:
- Reiterated Outperform on CCU and AMLN.

Night Trading
Asian indices are +.25% to +.50% on average.
S&P 500 indicated -.06%.
NASDAQ 100 indicated -.04%.

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Earnings of Note
Company/Estimate
AVP/.35
CECO/.51
EDS/.03
HUM/.48
OSIP/-.67
PDLI/-.11
TSN/.17

Splits
CLC 2-for-1

Economic Releases
10:00 EST
- Construction Spending for March is estimated to rise .3% versus a .4% increase in February.
- ISM Manufacturing for April is estimated to fall to 55.0 versus a reading of 55.2 in March.
- ISM Prices Paid for April is estimated to fall to 72.1 versus a reading of 73.0 in March.

BOTTOM LINE: Asian Indices are mostly higher on optimism over earnings and lower energy prices. I expect US stocks to open modestly higher in the morning on bargain-hunting, short-covering and lower energy prices. The Portfolio is 100% net long heading into the week.

Sunday, May 01, 2005

Weekly Outlook

There are several important economic reports and a few significant corporate earnings reports scheduled for release this week.

Economic reports for the week include:

Mon. - Construction Spending, ISM Manufacturing/Prices Paid
Tues. - Factory Orders, FOMC Rate Decision, Vehicle Sales
Wed. - ISM Non-Manufacturing
Thur. - 1Q Non-farm Productivity, 1Q Unit Labor Costs, Initial Jobless Claims
Fri. - Unemployment Rate, Average Hourly Earnings, Change in Non-farm Payrolls, Consumer Credit

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

Mon. - Avon Products(AVP), Electronic Data Systems(EDS), Tyson Foods(TSN)
Tues. - Caremark Rx(CMX), Electronic Arts(ERTS), Emerson Electric(EMR), Marsh & McLennan(MMC), MBIA(MBI), Maxim Integrated(MXIM), Transocean Inc.(RIG), Tyco Intl.(TYC), Veritas Software(VRTS)
Wed. - Cigna(CI), Duke Energy(DUK), IAC/InterActiveCorp.(IACI), Time Warner(TWX), Univision Communications(UVN), Whole Foods Market(WFMI)
Thur. - CVS Corp.(CVS), EchoStar Communications(DISH), Gillette(G), McAfee(MFE), MCI Inc.(MCIP), McKesson(MCK)
Fri. - Berkshire Hathaway(BRK/A)

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

Mon. - Deutsche Bank Health Care Conference, Bear Stearns Aerospace/Defense Conference
Tue. - GM/F Sales Conference Call, Banc of America Basic Industries Conference, Merrill Tech Gathering Conference, Deutsche Bank Health Care Conference
Wed. - Banc of America Basic Industries Conference, JP Morgan Gaming & Lodging Conference, Morgan Stanley Healthcare Conference, Merrill Tech Gathering Conference, Deutsche Bank Health Care Conference
Thur. - Morgan Stanley Healthcare Conference, INTC Analyst Meeting, Morgan Stanley Media & Communications Conference, QCOM Analyst Meeting, SEBL Analyst Meeting, Fed's Greenspan speaks, Fed's Moskow speaks, Fed's Olson speaks
Fri. - Morgan Stanley Healthcare Conference, Morgan Stanley Media & Communications Conference

BOTTOM LINE: I expect US stocks to finish the week higher on bargain hunting, falling energy prices, short-covering, good earnings reports, less hawkish Fed comments and low long-term interest rates. However, if the Fed fails to acknowledge the recent weakening in some economic data points, stocks will likely remain mired in their recent trading range. The combination of the Fed hinting at a pause in the rate of hikes and oil moving back to the mid-$40s could push stocks substantially higher. While I am very confident we have seen the highs in oil for this cycle, I am not ruling out a countertrend rally over the next few weeks. Investor sentiment is still near levels normally associated with meaningful market bottoms. I continue to expect the second half of the year to be much better for US equities than the first half as inflation decelerates, commodities prices fall, long-term interest rates remain low, low valuations tempt investors, growth accelerates, the US dollar remains firm, employment continues to improve, consumer sentiment strengthens and merger activity continues. Homebuilder, Retail, Biotech, Airline, Financial, Internet and Gaming shares should outperform in the second half of the year, given my outlook. My trading indicators are still bearish and the Portfolio is 100% net long heading into the week.

Economic Week in Review

ECRI Weekly Leading Index 134.80 -.30%

Existing Home Sales for March rose to 6.89M versus estimates of 6.79M and an upwardly revised 6.82M in February. US sales of previously owned homes unexpectedly rose in March to the third-fastest pace ever as low interest rates and job gains encouraged buyers, Bloomberg said. The average 30-year mortgage rate is now 5.78%, down from 6.04% at the end of March and substantially below the two-decade average of 8%. The median price of an existing home rose 3.2% to $195,000, Bloomberg reported. "With wages rising, overall compensation rising, the job situation quite steady and maybe improving, the demand for housing is going to stay there," said Roger Kubarych, a senior adviser at HVB America and a former economist at the Fed. The supply of homes available for sale, another gauge of housing demand, fell to 4 months' worth in March from 4.1 months' worth the previous month.

Consumer Confidence for April fell to 97.7 versus estimates of 98.0 and an upwardly revised 103.0 in March. Consumers were discouraged after gas rose to $2.32/gallon during the month. A slowdown in hiring and falling stock prices probably curbed optimism and spending as well, Bloomberg said. The present situation component of the index dropped to 113.6, the second straight decline, from 117. However, this component "remains at levels indicative of a healthy economy," said Lynn Franco, director of the Conference Board's Consumer Research Center. Moreover, consumers planning to buy a home in the next six months rose to 3.9% from 3.8%. That figure averaged 3.7% in 2004, when home sales were a record. Finally, consumers planning to buy a major-appliance rose to 31.5% from 30.8%, Bloomberg reported. "To be sure, the rise in energy prices seems to have taken a toll on consumer confidence and spending most recently," Fed Governor Kohn said. "But with financial conditions still accommodative, profits and cash flow still healthy, and incomes continuing to increase, most forecasters expect growth to remain solid."

New Home Sales for March rose 12.2% to 1431K, the highest level ever, versus estimates of 1190K and an upwardly revised 1275K in February. Sales so far this year have averaged a 1.295M rate, compared with last year's record 1.2M, Bloomberg reported. Mortgage rates within a percentage point of a four-decade low and job and income gains are encouraging buyers, helping power the economy, Bloomberg said. "Of course we all expect it to slow from the record of 2004, but to call it the end of the housing boom would be wrong," said Ellen Beeson, an economist at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi. American home ownership and net worth are near all-time record levels, Bloomberg reported. Finally, the supply of new homes available for sale fell to 3.6 months' worth in March, the lowest level since August 2003, from 4.3 months' worth the previous month.

Durable Goods Orders for March fell 2.8% versus estimates of a .3% increase and a downwardly revised .2% decline in February. Durables Ex Transportation for March fell 1.0% versus estimates of a .5% increase and a .2% decline in February. "You are starting to see some evidence that the economy is losing momentum," said Steven Ricchiuto, chief US economist at ABN Amro. "We need to start taking some growth out of the second-quarter forecasts." Orders for transportation equipment fell 7.8%, spurred by a 23% decline in the volatile aircraft category, after falling .2% in February, Bloomberg reported. Ian Shepherdson, chief US economist at High Frequency Economics, said the report was probably skewed by the working days around Easter, which was in March rather than April. "These data are unreliable," said Shepherdson, the only economist who correctly forecast the decline. "Expect a hefty April rebound."

Advance 1Q GDP rose 3.1% versus estimates of 3.5% and a 3.8% increase in 4Q. Advance 1Q Personal Consumption rose 3.5% versus estimates of a 3.2% increase and a 2.3% gain in 4Q. Advance 1Q GDP Price Deflator rose 3.2% versus estimates of a 2.1% increase and a 2.3% gain in 4Q. The higher fuel costs that stung consumers may have made companies less inclined to invest as much in new equipment as orders slowed, economists said. The US trade deficit subtracted 1.49 percentage points from first-quarter growth, the most since the fourth quarter of 2002, Bloomberg said. The surge in oil prices led to a jump in the value of imports. Even though GDP growth failed to meet estimates, it is just below the 3.3% average of the expansion from 1991-2001, Bloomberg reported.

Initial Jobless Claims rose to 320K versus estimates of 320K and 299K the prior week. Continuing Claims fell to 2555K versus estimates of 2644K and 2631K prior. The Help Wanted Index for March fell to 39 versus estimates of 41 and a reading of 41 in February. The figures point to a "stable job market," said David Sloan, senior economist at 4Cast. Claims so far this year are averaging 325,529, compared with 353,300 at this point last year, the best year for hiring since the height of the bubble in 1999, Bloomberg said. The insured unemployment rate, which tends to track movements in the US employment rate, dropped to a four-year-low of 2%, after lingering at 2.1% since mid-January, Bloomberg reported.

Personal Income for March rose .5% versus estimates of a .4% gain and an upwardly revised .7% increase in February. Personal Spending for March rose .6% versus estimates of a .4% gain and a .4% increase in February. The PCE Deflator for March(YoY) rose 2.4% versus estimates of a 2.5% increase and a 2.2% gain in February. PCE Core for March(YoY) rose 1.7% versus estimates of a 1.7% increase and a 1.6% gain in February. "Solid income growth is keeping consumer spending steady," said Bruce Kasman, head of economic research at JP Morgan. Disposable incomes, when adjusted for inflation, were up 3.3% last month from March 2004. "Growth in real disposable income will be one of the key factors keeping consumer spending from retrenching more sharply," said Joseph Abate, a senior economist at Lehman Brothers. The PCE core, the Fed's favorite inflation gauge, is within the stated optimal range of 1.5-1.75%, Bloomberg said.

Employment Cost Index for 1Q rose .7% versus estimates of a 1.0% gain and a .7% increase in 4Q. US labor expenses unexpectedly increased at a slower pace in the first quarter, reflecting the smallest rise in benefit costs in three years, Bloomberg reported. "There's no clear evidence of rising wage inflation at this point," said Dean Maki, chief economist at Barclays Capital.

Final Univ. of Mich. Consumer Confidence for April fell to 87.7 versus estimates of 88.8 and a prior estimate of 88.7. Waning sentiment threatens to erode consumer spending, which accounts for more than two-thirds of the US economy. So far, the effects have been limited as evidenced by the strong personal spending report, Bloomberg said.

Chicago Purchasing Manager for April fell to 65.6 versus estimates of 62.5 and a reading of 69.2 in March, which was the highest reading in 16 years. "Despite the slowdown, manufacturing activity in the Chicago region is still expanding robustly," said Steven Wood, chief economist at Insight Economics. The index of prices paid by companies for materials and supplies fell to 66.1 from 68.2 the prior month, Bloomberg reported.

BOTTOM LINE: Overall, last week's economic data were mixed. Home sales are still booming and should remain healthy throughout the year. The recent decline in mortgage rates should offset some of the negative effects from unseasonably mild/wet weather in April. A home is the largest purchase most consumers make in their lives. The recent downturn in consumer sentiment is likely not as bad as perceived considering record home sales. Negative political rhetoric, declining stocks and high gas prices have been weighing on confidence. However, I expect rising stock prices, lower energy prices, a modestly improving labor market and low interest rates to boost the psyche of the consumer in the second half of the year. The sharp decline in Durable Goods Orders was likely a result of mostly temporary factors. GDP growth is slowing from high levels to more sustainable less inflationary rates. As I have stated before, GDP growth may temporarily slow to around 2% before bouncing back to over 3% in the second half of the year. The labor market continues to improve modestly. The pace of improvement will allow unemployment to gradually decline without spurring a substantial increase in unit labor costs, which are the main component of inflation. As well, the smallest increase in labor benefit costs in three years is a positive. The decline in the index of prices paid by the Chicago Purchasing Managers is remarkable considering the steep rise in commodity prices in the first quarter. Inflation remains only at average rates and will decelerate in the second half of the year. I continue to believe the fact that oil inventories are 6% above historical averages is likely a result of companies expecting even higher prices in the future, which has temporarily resulted in an artificial boost in demand. As perceptions change regarding the future direction of oil prices, this demand will evaporate and likely cause an even greater decline in the price of crude than would otherwise be the case. This appears to be happening sooner than I had anticipated. I expect crude prices will decline to $35/bbl. at some point in the second half of the year. Finally, the ECRI Weekly Leading Index fell .30% to 134.80 and is still forecasting healthy levels of economic activity.