Wednesday, December 30, 2009

FusionIQ's Barry Ritholtz is the Yahoo Tech Ticker Guest of the Year....

Tech Ticker's Best of 2009: Guest of the Year, Barry Ritholtz: by Aaron Task

On March 10, Barry Ritholtz, CEO of Fusion IQ, came on Tech Ticker and said the "mother of all bear market rallies" was upon us.

Given the appearance was within 24 hours of what proved to be a historical market bottom, that call alone would have put Ritholtz in the running as our top guest of 2009 and winner of the coveted (and fictitious) "Purple Microphone" award. Ritholtz's call was more notable because, until then, he'd been steadfastly bearish on the market, meaning he was one of the few pundits to successfully navigate the downturn of 2008 and play the upside of 2009.

But unlike many other bears who turned bullish last spring, Ritholtz didn't abandon bullishness as the rally continued through the rest of 2009:

In May he said: Don't Call It a Suckers Rally

In mid-September he said: The Rally May Only Be in 6th or 7th Inning

And as of last week, he was still saying you have to give the rally the benefit of the doubt, suggesting the S&P could hit 1300 before faltering.

While other Tech Ticker guests were bullish on stocks in 2009, many did so because they believed a V-shaped recovery was afoot and that the housing market had bottomed. Ritholtz was able to walk the intellectual tightrope between being bullish on stocks and being skeptical about a robust recovery, especially in housing. As 2009 comes to a close, both calls are looking prescient.

Still, nobody's perfect. In mid-June, Ritholtz dismissed the "second-half recovery" story and said stocks were more apt to retest the March lows in the fall vs. hit new high, although he subsequently reverted back to the bullish (and right) side. 

Link to the video is here:

http://finance.yahoo.com/tech-ticker/tech-ticker%27s-best-of-2009-guest-of-the-year-barry-ritholtz-397372.html

Monday, December 28, 2009

MarketWrap for 12/28/09 6th straight daily gain on strong retail sales....

U.S. retail sales rose an estimated 3.6 percent this holiday season as online gift-buying, last- minute spending and an extra shopping day spurred a recovery from last year, the worst in four decades.  Helping lift sentiment, MasterCard's  SpendingPulse unit said a late boost from procrastinating consumers and an extra day of shopping between Thanksgiving and Christmas increased total retail sales, excluding automobiles and gas, by 3.6% over the year-earlier period through Christmas Eve. Macy's  climbed 1.1% , while Saks rose 1.3% and American Eagle Outfitters advanced 2.9%.   Also providing a boost, online retail giant Amazon.com  said over the weekend that sales on its peak holiday-shopping day topped 9.5 million items.  This news helped stocks rise for the 6th straight session, despite choppiness throughout the day.  The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 26.98 points, or 0.3%, to 10, 547.08, its highest close since Oct. 1, 2008.  The technology-heavy NASDAQ added 5.39 points, or 0.2%, to 2,291.08.  The Standard & Poor's 500 added 1.3 points, or 0.1%, to 1,127.78.  Volume was light across the board which is to be expected the last trading week on the decade. 

The market is back to levels not seen since the fall of 2008, around the time of the collapse of Lehman Brothers.  Year-to-date the Dow is up just over 20%, the S&P 500 is up 25% and the NASDAQ is up 45%.  But all three major indexes are up even more substantially since hitting multi-year lows on March 9 amid the height of the financial crisis.

Thursday, December 24, 2009

Weekend at Bernies ... ouch !!!

According to AP - Prisoned Ponzi master Bernie Madoff was moved a hospital in Durham, N.C. after he suffered "serious injuries consistent with an assault" according to a report from a local ABC affiliate.

Mr. Madoff, who is now being treated at the medical facility in the Butner, N.C. prison where he is serving his 150-year sentence, was treated at Duke hospital in Durham last Friday for the injuries and discharged earlier this week, according to WTVD ABC 11, which cited unnamed sources.  However, a lawyer for the hospitalized Madoff says his client has experienced dizziness and high blood pressure. The Bureau of Prisons said Thursday that the 71-year-old disgraced financier remains under medical care for a seventh day.  Prison officials have declined to reveal why he was transferred from a North Carolina federal prison to a hospital. But bureau spokeswoman Traci Billingsley did say there have been no assaults at the prison in the past week.  Lawyer Ira Sorkin tells The Associated Press that Madoff has "had some dizzy spells and some high blood pressure."

Duke University Medical Center says Madoff was released Monday. Billingsley says he is now in a prison medical facility.  Madoff has been imprisoned since March after pleading guilty to fraud and admitting cheating thousands of investors out of billions of dollars.

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

NHL Winter Classic at Fenway Park

Off the topic of finance for a few minutes.  Below is a great link that shows a time lapse video of the construction of the outdoor rink at Fenway Park which will host a game on January 1st 2010 between the Boston Bruins and the Philadelphia Flyers.

http://video.nhl.com/videocenter/console?id=54660

Tuesday, December 22, 2009

MarketWrap for 12/22/09-Stocks gain on Home Sales data...

Stocks and the U.S. dollar rose while government bonds and the cost of insuring against corporate defaults declined on evidence economies around the world are improving.  The Dow Jones Industrial Average was up 51 to close at 10,464.  The S&P 500 gained 4 points to close at 1,118 and the NASDAQ rallied 15 points to close at 2,252.  Both the Nasdaq Composite and the S&P 500 climbed to new 2009 closing highs.  Gold fell to a seven-week intraday low.  The gains came as used-home sales for November were particularly strong, having risen more than double the increase economists had expected. The report was a boon to stocks exposed to the housing sector, especially home builders, as strength in existing-home sales tends to come ahead of major improvements in new-home sales.    Equities in the world’s largest economy advanced even after the U.S. Commerce Department said gross domestic product expanded at a 2.2 percent rate in the third quarter, slower than the 2.8 percent pace originally reported by the government.

Monday, December 21, 2009

Post Market Wrap - 12/21/2009 ... Santa Clause is coming to town ...



Call it a Santa Claus rally, call it window dressing, call it portfolio manager benchmark chasing, call it manipulation, call it all of the above or whatever you like but stocks are clearly trying to levitate higher through year end.
During the holiday season it is hard to call a market as it seems like trading desks are half staffed and even the bears go into hibernation for a bit. After all it is winter. 
That said the direction for stocks remains up. While common logic suggests a pullback should occur or a correction is needed stocks continue to climb the wall of worry and doubt. Until that wall is replaced by complacency, acceptance and over confidence stocks will likely continue to trend higher a bit longer.
Internals remain solid (not exceptional) however the new 52 week high list is expanding again, which is bullish. 
We continue to expound the mantra - hold ‘em if you’re long ‘em. Just make sure you plan an exit strategy such as; trailing stops or strategic pruning. As much as we want to see the cracks in the foundation and not sound like a broken record for now there aren't any.

California Pizza Kitchen (CPKI) ... bouncing from support .... Low risk entry ....

As seen below CPKI shares (an earlier recommendation of ours) is at the lower end of its trading range and moving higher.  Buying here just above the range low and near support at $ 12.30 (purple line) may offer a low risk entry as opposed to waiting for the secular technical turnaround which only occurs on a breakout above resistance near $ 17.15 (red line and arrows).  This formation appears to be a longer term bottom forming in CPKI shares.  Buying here is for those who want to jump the gun, be early or limit downside in the event of being wrong.  Only taking out resistance, a trade for those who want more confirmation, would suggest a much larger advance is at hand.

 

New York Times (NYT) ... about to breakout ??


As seen below New York Times Co.-Class A (NYT) has had another big volume surge this past week within the context of a nice base.  This is all occurring as NYT approaches horizontal resistance near $ 11.50 (orange lines) and a downtrend line (red line).  Above these levels shares can run quickly to $ 15.00.

Peers such as GCI and WPO have also been showing technical strength of late as well.  Additionally add sales have come back strong from last year levels and we would suggest the technical strength is a preview of what are likely to be a continued rebound in ad sales.  Smart investors may want to position ahead of this and jump on the breakout.

As an additional catalyst there is the continued rumor that GOOG may be a suitor.

Friday, December 18, 2009

MarketWrap for 12/18/09-Financials and Technology lead the way today.....

Stocks rose today, trimming a weekly loss for the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index, after better than estimated profits at Oracle Corp. and Research In Motion Ltd. boosted technology companies across the board.  The S&P 500, which is up 22 percent in 2009 after its worst year since the Great Depression, added 0.6 percent to 1,102.39. The Dow Jones Industrial Average Index increased 20.63 points to 10,328.89. The NASDAQ climbed 1.1 percent to 2,203.36.  For the week, the S&P 500 fell 0.4 percent, while the Dow  lost 1.4 percent and NASDAQ was up 1% from the week-ago close.   Both tech stocks and financial stocks had been beaten down during the previous session, but rebounded to respective gains of 1.6% and 1.4% this session

Consumer shares continued their weakness.  Consumer staples companies in the S&P 500 fell for a fourth straight day, losing 1.6 percent for the steepest loss among 10 groups.  Philip Morris International lost 1.3 percent to $48.66.  PepsiCo, the biggest snack maker, slipped 0.9 percent to $59.48.

For a fifth straight week the S&P 500 was unable to top the 1,120 level that marks the midpoint of its 57 percent plunge from a record in October 2007 to a 12-year low in March 2009.

Thursday, December 17, 2009

FusionIQ Market Wrap - 12/17/2009 - Stocks sell off as Dollar rallies ...

Stiff selling on heavy volume came as the dollar spiked against foreign currencies and financials faltered.  Stocks now head into Friday with a week-to-date loss of nearly 1%.  On the session the Dow Jones Industrial Average closed down 132 points to close at 10,308, while the S&P 500 Index closed down 13 points at 1,096.  The technology laden NASDAQ lost 26 points to close at 2,180.  So far this week the dollar made its way to a 1.1% gain against competing currencies.

Support for the greenback had the Dollar Index up as much as 1.4%, which put it at a new three-month high.  The dollar strength pressured both stocks and commodities.  The materials sector was the biggest loser on the session as it settled with a loss of 2.3%.  Additionally financials faltered on news that Citigroup priced shares in its previously announced common stock offering at $3.15 each, a near 9% discount to the previous session's closing price. The lower than expected pricing kept the Treasury from unloading its $5 billion of shares in the company.  Financials, which make up 14% of the stock market's weight, fell 1.8%.

FedEx Corp. also left investors uninspired with its latest quarterly results. The global shipment company brought in earnings of $1.10 per share, which matched its preannouncement, but topped the consensus of $1.06 per share. However, FedEx expects third quarter earnings to range from $0.50 to $0.70 per share, which is shy of the current consensus of $0.84 per share. It also stated it expects earnings for fiscal 2010 to range from $3.45 to $3.75 per share, which brackets the current consensus of $3.46 per share.

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

MarketWrap for 12/16/09-Stocks mixed on Fed comments....

U.S. stocks were mixed today, the dollar strengthened against the yen and yields on 10-year Treasury notes rose to a four-month high on concern the Federal Reserve is preparing investors for higher interest rates next year.   The FOMC stated that economic activity has continued to pick up and that deterioration in the labor market is abating.  The FOMC also expressed that conditions in the financial markets are improving, so some of the Fed's special liquidity facilities will soon end as planned.  The FOMC indicated that the target range for the federal funds rate will remain at 0.00% to 0.25% and that economic conditions, including low rates of resource utilization, subdued inflation trends, and stable inflation expectations, are likely to warrant exceptionally low levels of the federal funds rate for an extended period. The overall language in the statement is consistent with previous statements, so it helped calm concerns that the Fed may look to raise interest rates sooner than later.

Though the dollar was able to improve its position, support for commodities remained strong. That gave the CRB Commodity Index a 1.6% gain, its best by percent in three weeks, and helped the materials sector outperform.  Materials stocks advanced 1.0%, led by diversified metals and miners (+1.7%).

Energy stocks also looked strong.  They advanced 0.5% as oil prices closed 2.8% higher at $72.68 per barrel.  Early weakness in the dollar and a larger-than-expected weekly inventory draw of 3.69 million barrels underpinned oil's strength.

Tuesday, December 15, 2009

MarketWrap for 12/15/09-Stocks close down modestly after 4 days of gains....

U.S. stocks on Tuesday ended modestly lower after the government said inflation climbed faster than anticipated in November.  After four sessions in a row of gains, the Dow Jones Industrial Average 10,452, fell 49.05 points, or 0.5%, to 10,452.00. The S&P 500 Index shed 6.18 points, or 0.6%, to 1,107.93. The Nasdaq Composite Index declined 11.05 points, or 0.5%, to 2,201.05.  Financial shares led declines in U.S. stocks as Citigroup Inc. moved toward selling shares to repay bailout funds and credit-card delinquencies increased at JPMorgan Chase & Co. 

The dollar rallied to the highest level in more than two months, while stocks and Treasuries retreated on speculation the U.S. economic recovery will prompt the Federal Reserve to reduce stimulus measures.  Oil gained for the first time in 10 days to close at $70.70 up $1.17 while Gold was off slightly to $1,124.50.

We mentioned this morning in our Sentiment Note to institutional customers that while sentiment remains more neutral than bullish we expect prices to keep working higher (and corrections to be shallow) as it suggest investors still have more sideline liquidity available to purchase equities.

MarketWrap for 12/15/09-Stocks close down modestly after 4 days of gains....

U.S. stocks on Tuesday ended modestly lower after the government said inflation climbed faster than anticipated in November.  After four sessions in a row of gains, the Dow Jones Industrial Average 10,452, fell 49.05 points, or 0.5%, to 10,452.00. The S&P 500 Index shed 6.18 points, or 0.6%, to 1,107.93. The Nasdaq Composite Index declined 11.05 points, or 0.5%, to 2,201.05.  Financial shares led declines in U.S. stocks as Citigroup Inc. moved toward selling shares to repay bailout funds and credit-card delinquencies increased at JPMorgan Chase & Co. 

The dollar rallied to the highest level in more than two months, while stocks and Treasuries retreated on speculation the U.S. economic recovery will prompt the Federal Reserve to reduce stimulus measures.  Oil gained for the first time in 10 days to close at $70.70 up $1.17 while Gold was off slightly to $1,124.50.

We mentioned this morning in our Sentiment Note to instututional customers that while sentiment remains more neutral than bullish we expect prices to keep working higher (and corrections to be shallow) as it suggest investors still have more sideline liquidity available to purchase equities.

Friday, December 11, 2009

Market Wrap ... Week pretty much flat ...

The week pretty was pretty much a wash for stocks as in the early part of the week equities sold off and by week end had recouped most of the losses.

As we highlighted in some earlier comments the S&P 500 is still above key support levels such as 1,083.  If you are short term trader that’s a key level.  For traders with a medium to longer term focus we suggest watching the 1,050 level followed by 1,026.

So far those levels have not been violated so the bull trend remains intact. That said we suggested earlier in the week and continue to suggest reviewing positions and tightening up stops.

Market internals remain not committal and sentiment is still neutral (ie not overly bullish).  We continue to give the bull run the benefit of the doubt. Next week the same levels will remain in play and should be watched closely.

So if your long "em" - hold "em" for now. We suggest just getting your exit strategies in place should we violate the aforementioned S&P 500 levels.

Thursday, December 10, 2009

Americans' net worth on the rise ... but still way down from 2007

According to AP - Inch by inch, Americans are recovering some of their vast loss of wealth from the recession, thanks to gains in stock investments and home values. It's likely to be a long trek. Net worth — the value of assets such as homes, bank accounts and investments, minus debts like mortgages and credit cards — rose 5 percent last quarter, to $53.4 trillion, the Federal Reserve said Thursday. That was the second straight quarterly increase.

Yet even with those gains, Americans' net worth remains far below its revised peak of $64.5 trillion reached before the recession began. That underscores the vast loss of wealth over the past two years. Net worth would need to rise an additional 21 percent just to return to its pre-recession height. And many analysts don't expect a repeat of the strong second- and third-quarter gains any time soon. That's why Scott Hoyt, senior director of consumer economics at Moody's Economy.com, thinks household wealth won't match its pre-recession peak until about 2012.

"We're clearly moving in the right direction, although we have questions about whether we can get there as quickly as we have in the past couple of quarters," Hoyt said.  Investments delivered by far the biggest boost to net worth in the July-September period. The value of corporate equities jumped $1.04 trillion, slightly less than the previous quarter's rise.

That increase mirrored the stock market's powerful showing. The Standard & Poor's 500 index, a barometer of the market, rose 15 percent in the third quarter. And it's surged about 60 percent since March.  Still, even with an additional 4 percent gain so far in the fourth quarter, the S&P index is still 32 percent off the peak of October 2007. The recession began in December 2007. The gains in net worth are expected to slow, along with the broader economic recovery. Credit remains tight. And consumers still aren't spending freely.

Some analysts fear the Fed's policy of cheap lending and the weak dollar are inflating stock market performance and encouraging too much speculation. They say the gains of recent quarters aren't sustainable.  "We will eventually recover the loss in net worth, but it may take three to five years," said Mark Vitner, senior economist for Wells Fargo Securities in Charlotte, N.C.

Real estate was a smaller part of the increase in third-quarter net worth. The value of American households' real estate holdings rose 2 percent, or $348 billion. Analysts expect prices to dip again this winter as foreclosures spread and economic growth remains modest.  With those low-priced properties dominating sales, Barclays Capital economist Michelle Meyer forecasts an 8 percent drop in prices before they hit bottom next spring. Other analysts expect a drop of 5 to 10 percent before the market hits bottom in the spring.

Americans also are paying off debt at record levels, the Fed said. They reduced mortgages, credit cards and other loans by 2.6 percent in the third quarter and have been cutting household debt levels for a year. That's a healthy sign for personal finances, but a cautionary one for economic growth: Consumers are paring their debt with money they might otherwise be spending.  Even though stocks remain far below their pre-recession levels, employees who have stayed invested in 401(k) plans and continued to contribute have fared better: Major 401(k) providers say nearly 60 percent of such participants now have more money in their accounts than before the market decline.

Alan Hull, of Canton, Mich., said he feels better about the economy but doesn't feel any richer. His 401(k) account has recovered some, but his other investments have a long way to go.  "To say that we are wealthier — that's kind of a misnomer," said Hull, 56, who works in information technology for Ford Motor Co. "But I'm starting to see the light at the end of the tunnel, and I don't feel like it's an oncoming train."

MarketWrap for 12/10/09-Stocks move back into the black for the month...

The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 68.78, or 0.7 percent, to 10,405.83, pushing it back into the winning column for the month.  The Standard & Poor's 500 index rose 6.40, or 0.6 percent, to 1,102.35, while the NASDAQ composite index rose 7.13, or 0.3 percent, to 2,190.86.   The gains in stocks came as the dollar stabilized and were led by gains of 1% each in health-care and consumer-discretionary sectors.  For months stocks and the dollar have moved in the opposite direction.  Record-low U.S. interest rates have pressured the dollar for much of this year, leading investors to buy assets like stocks and commodities that can earn better returns than cash.  In recent weeks, signs of improvement in the economy have brought expectations that the Federal Reserve might raise interest rates sooner than expected.  That would strengthen the dollar.   A weaker dollar is lifting demand for U.S. goods, which become less expensive for foreign buyers when the greenback falls. The Commerce Department said a rise in exports helped narrow the nation's trade gap to $32.9 billion in October.  Economists had been expecting an increase.  Exports rose 2.5 percent which is the sixth straight monthly increase.  Investors will likely be paying close attention to a policy statement from the Federal Reserve when it determines interest rates next week.

In other trading, Treasury prices fell for a second day after an auction of 30-year bonds drew weak demand. The slump in prices for long-dated bonds pushed yields higher. The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note rose to 3.48 percent from 3.44 percent late Wednesday, while the yield on the 30-year bond rose to 4.49 percent from 4.42 percent.

Gold rose after a four-day slide, while oil fell for a seventh day, losing 13 cents to settle at $70.54 a barrel.

As we mentioned to our institutional customers this morning, the S&P 500 Index still remains in an up trending wedge however for the last two weeks the index has stalled under a secondary downtrend line. While two weeks of stalling at resistance is not a major concern yet it does at very minimum raise a cautionary tone given the S&P 500 has had such a large, uninterrupted advance. Weekly momentum as measured by the Relative Strength Index (RSI) has remained neutral while the S&P 500 has rallied. However until near term supports are broken near 1,050 then 1,026 it is hard to get too negative. So to reiterate some yellow lights are flashing but the bottom line is the trend is still up and remains intact and only a move below the 1,050 then 1,026 level would be viewed as a negative. From a portfolio management perspective we would tighten up stops on profitable positions reduce long side exposure if the above mentioned levels are violated.  

Tuesday, December 8, 2009

MarketWrap for 12/8/09-Stocks slide for 4th time in past 8 sessions...

Stocks and commodities were weak the entire session today as  cautionary comments about the U.S. debt rating and strength in the U.S. dollar weighed on the minds of market participants.  Broader sentiment remains mixed as investors continue to assess the market's near-term direction.  Weakness in the broader market handed the S&P 500 its second straight loss and its fourth decline in eight sessions. The split between advancing sessions and declining sessions comes as investors try to determine the near-term direction of trade after stocks repeatedly failed to hold new their 2009 highs last week.  The most notable rollover came as stocks faltered after an impressive monthly payrolls report last Friday.  That move may suggest that the positive economic news had already been priced into the stock market and that something more is needed to help stocks hold gains amid a simultaneous advance by the dollar.  Sellers also were active due to news from The Wall Street Journal that Moody's Investors Service believes the U.S. and U.K. need to trim their respective deficits in order to help protect against a downgrade to their triple-A ratings.  

The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 104.14 points, or 1%, to 10285.97, its biggest decline since Nov. 27.    The S&P 500 Index also closed down 1% to 1091.  The NASDAQ closed down 16 points at 2,173.  Volume was light on the New York Stock Exchange, with 1.18 billion shares changing hands, below last year's estimated daily average of 1.49 billion, while on the NADAQ, about 1.97 billion shares traded, also below last year's daily average of 2.28 billion.

Monday, December 7, 2009

Market Wrap - stocks mostly flat, Fed Ex raises guidance after the bell ...

Friday's mixed finish was extended into today’s action as the Dow Jones Industrial Average ended up a mere 1 point to close at 10,390.  The SP 500 ended the session down close to 3 points to close at 1,103 while the tech heavy NASDAQ closed at 2,189, down close to 5 points.

While the overall market lacked direction the financials were noticeably weak for the majority of the trading day and finished off down - 1.6%. The financial sector was weighed down by weakness in shares of banks (-1.6%) and diversified financial services companies (-1.8%). Though last week's news that Bank of America (BAC) plans to repay its $45 billion TARP loan helped win temporary favor for financials, today we saw the reverse as news CitiGroup (C) would as well caused concern not excitement.

Federal Chairman Ben Bernanke again weighed on the recovery suggesting that the economy faces “formidable headwinds,” including a weak labor market and tight credit that are likely to produce a “moderate” pace of expansion.  Speaking at the Economic Club of Washington Bernanke stated, "The economy confronts some formidable headwinds that seem likely to keep the pace of expansion moderate,” Additionally he said  inflation remains “subdued” and is likely to move lower. 

In news after the bell … Fed Ex Corp. (FDX), boosted its earnings-per-share outlook for the second quarter.  FDX announced it expects to earn $1.10 per share in the quarter. While this marks a 30% decrease from the year-ago period, the revision was well above earlier estimates.  This news from Fed Ex is likely to take the market out of its quiet range trade tomorrow. 

That said the FDX news will be a good litmus test to see where the markets psyche stands. Does it bid up shares on good news or does the market sell off on this news ? Clearly the former would be bullish and the latter bearish.

As we always say it is not the news that is important but rather how the market reacts to it.   So keep your eyes and ears open as the "Message of the Markets" will be in full force in tomorrow’s trading.

A snaphsot on the current employment picture ...

Consumer spending is a complex beast to gauge as it is influenced by;  unemployment levels, debt service levels, wealth effect, tax and governmental policies (ie. home price and investment values) etc etc. 

In the attached graphic we look at one very important and contributing factor employment levels via continuous and initial claims.  While both shot up to levels never seen before since the government started tracking the statistics (note: these figures are not adjusted for labor market size for nor population), the important point to note is that they have both started to revert back to the mean very quickly suggesting that the employment picture is improving albeit from very bad conditions. 

If these trends continue in this direction we can expect consumer spending to remain strong and support equity prices (albeit with pullbacks)



Friday, December 4, 2009

FusionIQ MarketWrap for 12/4/09-Stocks end volatile day slightly higher...

Stocks rallied at the start of trading today after the Labor Department said the U.S. lost 11,000 jobs last month, the fewest since the recession began and less than one-tenth the 125,000 median estimate in a survey of economists. The unemployment rate dropped to 10 percent.  The S&P 500 swung between gains and losses all day as investors weighed concern the Fed will boost interest rates from near zero to curb speculation. Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said yesterday he doesn’t rule out using monetary policy to pop asset bubbles after officials in emerging markets suggested the central bank’s record-low federal funds rate is pushing prices too high.   For the day the Dow Jones industrials were up 22 at 10,388. The Standard & Poor's 500 index was up 6 at 1,106. The NASDAQ composite index was up 21 at 2,194.   Two stocks rose for every one that fell on the New York Stock Exchange. Volume totaled 1.5 billion compared with 1.1 billion Thursday.  The biggest rally in the U.S. dollar since January snuffed out an advance in commodities and limited the gains in equities due to the unexpected drop in the unemployment rate which started speculation that the Federal Reserve will lift borrowing costs. Gold slid the most in a year and Treasuries tumbled.

Thursday, December 3, 2009

FusionIQ Market Wrap for 12/03/09-Stocks fade into the closing bell...

U.S. stocks on Thursday saw  losses into the market's close, with investors anxious ahead of the monthly jobs report ahead of the next session. The Dow Jones Industrial Average ended at 10,366.15, off 86.53 points, or 0.8%. The Dow had fallen just over 100 points a few moments ahead of the closing bell. The S&P 500 Index  fell 9.32 points to 1,099.92, while the NASDAQ Composite declined 11.89 points to close at  2,173.14.  U.S. stocks broke a three-day winning streak after an unexpected contraction in service industries spurred concern about the economic recovery a day before the government’s November jobs report.  Financial institutions led the retreat in the S&P 500 as Bank of America Corp. prepared to sell more than $18 billion in equity to repay government bailout funds. American Express Co. lost 5.3 percent after the Institute for Supply Management’s index of non-manufacturing businesses missed the median economist estimate.  AIG was down 4.17 percent.   Banks, brokerages and the rest of the financial industry in the S&P 500 lost 2.1 percent as a group, the most among 10 groups.  Abercrombie & Fitch Co. led retailers lower after reporting a decrease in November sales.  Sales at U.S. stores open at least a year dropped 26.1 percent at Saks, the New York-based luxury retailer, in November from the same time last year. Comparable-store sales at Macy’s, the No. 2 U.S. department-store operator, dropped 6.1 percent.  President Barack Obama hosted a summit to discuss ways to spur employment and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke pledged to take job creation into account in formulating interest-rate policy.  Obama called economists, union heads and business leaders such as Eric Schmidt, chief executive officer of Google Inc., and Fred Smith of FedEx Corp., to the White House to solicit feedback on job-creation proposals. The suggestions include incentives to make homes more energy efficient, increased access to financing for small business and tax credits for companies.

ISM Non-Manufacturing Summary

The results of the November ISM nonmanufacturing survey suggest that growth was still moderate and that the labor market is still in bad shape. The nearly 6-point drop in the measure of activity in the survey, which most closely tracks output in the nonmanufacturing sector, is consistent with very little growth in final demand, a finding somewhat at odds with more upbeat data on consumer spending.

The disparity between the surveys of manufacturing and services grew larger in November. In manufacturing, production is strong because firms are gradually moving to stabilize inventories, which is expected to account for a larger share of the increase in GDP growth this quarter versus last quarter.

The details of the survey point toward renewed growth in nonmanufacturing in the months ahead. In particular, the new orders index was little changed near 55, similar to the levels achieved during the latter years of the 2000s expansion. With inventories low, the level of orders should translate into a pickup in business activity.

A particular disappointment was the absence of greater improvement in the employment index, which is the weakest component of the nonmanufacturing survey. The relationship with the ISM nonmanufacturing employment index is loose, and other labor market indicators such as jobless claims point to an improving trend. Still, with the ISM manufacturing employment index also falling in November, the odds of a more significant reduction in job losses appear lower.

FusionIQ NEW BUY on DG Fastchannel Inc. (DGIT) - Price Target $ 36.00

DGIT the Digital Standard in Advertising !!

We are initiating a NEW BUY with a $ 36.00 price target on DG Fastchannel, Inc. (DGIT) the leading provider of digital technology services that enable the electronic delivery of advertisements, syndicated programs, and video news releases to traditional broadcasters, online publishers and other media outlets.

Our Rationale is as follows:

  • DGIT IS THE MARKET LEADER - DGIT provides delivery services for 22 of the top 25 advertisers, as ranked by Ad Age.  The company works with 90% of the top 100 US advertisers
  • DGIT has High, Consistent Revenue Growth - Revenues have been up an average of 45% per year since 1995.  Adjusted EBITDA has been up 105% per year since 1995Ranked # 5 on the Fortune “Fastest Growing Companies in the World” list and on the Fortune Small Business list of the nation’s 100 fastest growing small public companies in 2009.
  • DGIT has solid Growth in High Definition Market.  DG FastChannel’s high definition revenue grew from just over $1 million in 2006 to $34 million in 2008 !!  The company has already earned $38.4 million in revenue during the first 3 quarters of 2009 and projects full year 2009 revenue of $55 million.
  • DGIT is seeing a cyclical Bottom in its 2nd largest Segment.  Revenue from the auto vertical (second largest for DG), which was down 20-30% in the first half of 2009, appears have improved in 3rd quarter ‘09 and will likely rebound further in 2010.
  • Great Balance Sheet - De-leveraging. DG completed an equity offering of 2.9 million common shares in 2Q09 for $52 million in net proceeds, all of which were used to reduce bank debtAt the end of the 3rd quarter, debt was down to $107.8 million or net debt of $81.  That is a net debt to EBITDA ratio of a mere 1.1x !!!
  • Additionally DGIT announced a partnership with Google TV whereby Google will use DG’s technology for video content ingesting, quality control and other workflow automation that will allow small business advertisers to buy remnant TV spots and upload their video ads !

FusionIQ NEW BUY on DG Fastchannel Inc. (DGIT) - Price Target $ 36.00

DGIT the Digital Standard in Advertising !!

 

We are initiating a NEW BUY with a $ 36.00 price target on DG Fastchannel, Inc. (DGIT) the leading provider of digital technology services that enable the electronic delivery of advertisements, syndicated programs, and video news releases to traditional broadcasters, online publishers and other media outlets.

 

 

Our Rationale is as follows:

 

  • DGIT IS THE MARKET LEADER - DGIT provides delivery services for 22 of the top 25 advertisers, as ranked by Ad Age.  The company works with 90% of the top 100 US advertisers
  • DGIT has High, Consistent Revenue Growth - Revenues have been up an average of 45% per year since 1995.  Adjusted EBITDA has been up 105% per year since 1995Ranked # 5 on the Fortune “Fastest Growing Companies in the World” list and on the Fortune Small Business list of the nation’s 100 fastest growing small public companies in 2009.
  • DGIT has solid Growth in High Definition MarketDG FastChannel’s high definition revenue grew from just over $1 million in 2006 to $34 million in 2008 !!  The company has already earned $38.4 million in revenue during the first 3 quarters of 2009 and projects full year 2009 revenue of $55 million.
  • DGIT is seeing a cyclical Bottom in its 2nd largest SegmentRevenue from the auto vertical (second largest for DG), which was down 20-30% in the first half of 2009, appears have improved in 3rd quarter ‘09 and will likely rebound further in 2010.
  • Great Balance Sheet - De-leveraging. DG completed an equity offering of 2.9 million common shares in 2Q09 for $52 million in net proceeds, all of which were used to reduce bank debtAt the end of the 3rd quarter, debt was down to $107.8 million or net debt of $81.  That is a net debt to EBITDA ratio of a mere 1.1x !!!
  • Additionally DGIT announced a partnership with Google TV whereby Google will use DG’s technology for video content ingesting, quality control and other workflow automation that will allow small business advertisers to buy remnant TV spots and upload their video ads !

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

FusionIQ Market Wrap for 12/2/09-Stocks end mixed.....

The stock market struggled but held its ground Wednesday as an upbeat assessment of the economy from the Federal Reserve offset drops in bank and energy stocks.  Most stocks finished higher after the Fed said regional economic activity has generally improved since its last snapshot in October. The central bank also said consumer spending has strengthened even as employment and commercial real estate remain weak.  The Dow Jones industrial average slipped 19 points to 10,452.68 a day after jumping 126 points. Reports of analysts' warnings about bank stocks hurt financial shares, while a steep drop in oil weighed on energy companies. Airlines jumped on hopes business is stabilizing.Gold managed to hold its gains in the face of a modest rebound by the greenback. The Dollar Index had traded near 52-week lows in the previous session, but managed to make its way to a 0.3% gain this session.  The dollar's advance helped undercut the stock market's gains, which had already begun to fade from fractionally improved 2009 highs as buyers took a breather. Stocks were left to surrender their gains and spend the afternoon with modest losses until some moderate support helped the broader market finish with a fractional gain.

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

FusionIQ Market Wrap for 12/1/09-Stocks start month on the plus side...

U.S. stocks rose, sending the Dow Jones Industrial Average to a 14-month high as Chinese manufacturing grew at the fastest pace in five years and Dubai World said it’s in talks to restructure less than half its debt.    The news helped give a lift to global indices and caused currency traders to step away from the greenback. With the dollar drooping again, the Dollar Index returned to 52-week lows before paring losses to finish with a 0.5% loss.  The pullback in the greenback stirred broad interest in both equities and commodities. That combination proved particularly beneficial for materials stocks and energy stocks, which finished with respective gains of 1.6% and 1.4%.  Materials stocks were led by gold plays, which advanced 3.8% as gold prices climbed to a new record high near $1204 per ounce before they closed pit trade with a 1.5% gain at $1200.20 per ounce.   Exxon Mobil Corp. helped send Standard & Poor’s 500 Index energy stocks to a 1.4 percent gain as oil rose for a second day.  The S&P 500 added 1.2 percent to 1,108.86. The Dow rose 126.74 points, or 1.2 percent, to 10,471.58.  The NASDAQ closed  at 2,175.81 up 31.21  or 1.46%