Stocks continued their happy saunter through the cold of January, with the Dow Jones Industrials posting another nearly-100-point gain, thanks in large part to IBM (up 7.98 to 188.50 (+4.42%) on solid 4th quarter earnings reported after the bell Thursday), which accounted for half of the Dow's gain all by itself.
The other indices lagged far behind the Blue Chips, courtesy of Google's (GOOG) worst earnings miss in six years, reporting a profit of $2.7 billion on revenue of $10.6 billion, well below Wall Street non-GAAP estimates of $9.50 per share versus an estimate of $10.46. Whoops! Shares of the internet behemoth were down 53.58 points, a loss of better-than eight percent.
Two other tech titans - Microsoft (MSFT) and Intel (INTC) - reported excellent quarters, helping to keep the montl-long rally going. The Dow, S&P and NYSE Composite were up each of the four trading days this week; the NASDAQ fell just short, losing 1.63, despite a valiant, last-half-hour rally.
Despite the outstanding gains from the last half of December through today, there are signs of trouble, and the fact that today marked options expiry, may lead to declines next week as more companies report. With just about 20% of the S&P 500 having reported, only 55% have beaten expectations, a ten year low. The average for the past ten years has been that 62% of companies beat street estimates. Considering that the big banks have all reported already - and all of them matched or beat - this does not bode well for the bulk of reporting companies which are set to report over the next two weeks.
Meanwhile, the Dow is back at levels last seen in mid-July, today's close just missing (four points) making a six-month high. It will be interesting to see if the Dow can crack through next week and continue onward toward exceeding the 2011 high of 12810.54 made on April 29. Yes, it's getting a bit frothy. The word for next week is likely to be "overbought," as in "we're market pumping day-traders who don't give a hoot about fundamentals, just making a profit."
So far, the advance-decline and new highs-new lows indicators are showing no sign of an impending correction, but, with the Dow up nearly 1000 points in just the past four weeks, a short correction would be something a healthy market would fully appreciate.
One other item that may be a canary in the coal mine is the nice rise in gold over the past few weeks, including a healthy advance today, and, finally, silver caught a bid over the past few sessions, finally breaking and holding over the artificial resistance at $30/ounce.
On CNBC today, the network featured a series of reports on housing, calling it, somewhat inappropriately, "The Big Fix." Hottest among the topics was the government plan to sell off Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac's inventory of foreclosed homes (REO) to investor groups which will turn these single-family homes scattered across the country into rental units.
As is usual with government's half-baked plans, there are a rash of questions and arguments against, primarily centered around the whole fairness issue of kicking families out and then reselling - at what should be huge discounts - to well-heeled investors more concerned with turning profits than restoring blighted neighborhoods. The plan is still in the formative stages, but there are indications that the government will allow the investors to rent to whomsoever they please, which would include welfare and other social program recipients, meaning that homeowners ought to be on guard for the ghetto-ization and balkanization of their McMansion neighborhoods, such as is the case in other socialized nations, notably France, where the ghettos are in the suburbs, far from the uber-rich in the well-maintained cites.
One other problem is that the banks - if they actually do the right thing and write down these loans - will be facing far larger write-downs on bulk sales than anticipated. Since the US economy has been predicated for the past six years on keeping the banks free from losses, the government plan looks like a classic election-year crash and burn before it even gets going.
Dow 12,720.48, +96.50 (0.76%)
NASDAQ 2,786.70, -1.63 (0.06%)
S&P 500 1,315.38, +0.88 (0.07%)
NYSE Compos 7,829.34, +9.97 (0.13%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,979,837,250
NYSE Volume 3,911,913,250
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 3289-2274
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 182-26
WTI crude oil: 98.46, -1.93
Gold: 1,664.00, +9.50
Silver: 31.68, +1.17
Friday, January 20, 2012
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