Thursday, April 26, 2007

Broken Record: Dow Makes Another High Mark

The stock market continues to dazzle and amaze amid a flurry of spectacular earning reports from American corporations, the latest being computer software behemoth Microsoft, which blew away estimates on Thursday.

Reporting after the final bell on Thursday, Microsoft reported earnings for the quarter ended March 31 rose to $4.93 billion, or 50 cents per share, up from $2.98 billion, or 29 cents in same period last year, a gain of 65%. Analysts were seeking 46 cents, so expect the company that Bill built to get a boost at tomorrow's opening.

Elsewhere, ExxonMobil reported its best 1st quarter ever, earning a staggering $9.3 billion, or 1.62 per share, up from $8.4 billion, or $1.37 per share for the same period of 2006.

Despite the generally good news, the indices were split, as both the NYSE Composite and S&P 500 suffered losses while the Dow and NASDAQ gained.

Dow 13,105.50 +15.61; NASDAQ 2,554.46 +6.57; S&P 500 1,494.25 -1.17; NYSE Composite 9,715.49 -31.08

Volume was once again strong, though profit-takers kept the markets in check throughout the session. Declining issues held a slight 11-10 edge over advancers. There were 513 new highs to just 93 new lows.

Oil slipped 78 cents to close just a shade above $65 per barrel, but precious metals suffered hefty losses as the dollar strengthened against the Euro and Pound. Gold lost $9.40, closing at $678.00. Silver lost 44 cents to end the day at $13.46.

Despite Thursday's lackluster performance, all indices should show gains for the week as a whole, mostly attributable to Wednesday's blowout performance.

Wednesday, April 25, 2007

Another Banner Day as Dow Crashes through 13,000

Wednesday was just another day on Wall Street in this exceptionally energetic earnings season. Apple reported outstanding numbers and stocks soared on a wave of unbridled optimism.

It's becoming so routine to the point of boredom, just watching everything go up, up, up all the time, day after day, la dee da...

If you're in the right stocks it's a marvelous time to be invested. The question is why, if all is so damn wonderful in the world of high finance and corporate profitability, did only 22% of respondents to a new NBC/Wall St. Journal poll say that America was moving in the right direction. There seems to be a high level of dissatisfaction afoot, but none of it could be found on Wall Street.

Still, the mood of the public raises an interesting question. Are these anonymous poll respondents seeing something we're missing? Are the profits on Wall Street more fleeting and illusory than we have been led to believe? Or are the investment returns isolated to an emerging, small class of wealthy individuals who reap most of the gain from soaring stocks?

Food for thought, which we're not going to bite on right now.

Dow 13,089.89 +135.95; NASDAQ 2,547.89 +23.35; S&P 500 1,495.42 +15.01; NYSE Composite 9,746.57 +98.07

Apple was the key driver for the day, reporting profits of $770 million, or 87 cents per share, up from $410 million, or 47 cents per share, in the year-ago period. The stock breached the $100 mark on the news, up 2.11 on the session. Analysts were looking for 64 cents per share, so they, like everyone else, were absolutely shocked at Apple's incredible performance.

Corporate news took precedence over the scourge of the street, crude oil, which jumped back up to $65.84/bbl., up $1.26 on the NY Mercantile Exchange. In what continues to be a counter-trade, gold and silver both lost ground again, though gold at $387.40 and silver at $13.90 are close to the higher end of the range. There may be some consolidation at this level, anticipating a break out. However, there have been a number of false flags like this, so it could just turn out to be more of the same as no catalyst seems capable of taking the metals to new highs.

Speaking of new highs, there were an astounding 602 of them, versus only 69 new lows, the bulk of those on the NASDAQ.

Volume was exceptionally strong, one of the top 5 volume days this year and advancing issues drubbed decliners by nearly a 2-1 margin.

The question for tomorrow and the succeeding sessions leading up to the May 9 FOMC meeting is, how high is up?

Tuesday, April 24, 2007

Dow Resumes Rally After One Day Hiatus

US equities mostly returned to the plus side after taking a day off on Monday. The Dow nearly erased yesterday's decline and closed within 47 points of 13,000, though the NYSE Composite and S&P 500 experienced marginal declines.

Dow 12,953.94 +34.54; NASDAQ 2,524.54 +0.87; S&P 500 1,480.41 -0.52; NYSE Composite 9,648.50 -12.06

The fuel for the rally (pun intended) was a dip in the price of crude, which slipped $1.31 to close at $64.58. While the relief was welcome, it was hardly enough to move gas prices or the pessimism felt by most drivers in the US who are paying close to - and in some cases, such as on the West coast, more than - $3.00 per gallon for regular unleaded.

In a related story, British Petroleum (BP) reported first quarter profits 17% lower than in the same period a year ago. The British concern saw 1Q profits of $4.66 billion, or 1.35 per share. BP made $5.62 billion or 1.54 per share in the first quarter of 2006. There was nary a tear shed for the still-exceedingly profitable company.

Other commodities were effected as well, with gold and silver taking tumbles. Gold lost $6.50 while silver declined 27 cents. The metals have stymied investors with more than a year of rangebound trading. Both recently closed near benchmarks but failed to sustain the momentum and have pulled back considerably.

Declining issues once again surpassed advancers by a 5-4 margin, and there was a slight shift in the new high - new low ratio. A total of 373 issues recorded new highs while 97 (the most in more than a week) companies set new low marks. While the high-low mantra may be more tail wagging the dog than vice versa, the indicator could be signaling that the recent run-up in stocks has lost momentum and another correction mechanism is about to be put into play.

Stocks are, as it is, near record levels and the sustainability of high share prices is still in doubt in some circles. While the indices may not immediately react, especially in the middle of a pretty good earnings season, but within weeks (and possibly coinciding with the Fed meeting of May 9) there could be a pullback of some consequence.

Most of the movement will be a function of sentiment rather than fundamentals, however, as the market has shown great resiliency in the face of some troubling trends, most notably in the housing sector, which continues to suffer.

According to CNN.com, Sales of existing homes fell 8.4% to an annual rate of 6.12 million in March from February's 6.68 million rate, the National Association of Realtors said. It was the biggest one-month drop since January 1989.

Lower prices for homes may be a problem for sellers, but it has to be good news for buyers, though there aren't many out there. With banks tightening their qualifications, fewer Americans can afford to buy a home today than last year. The other side of the equation is that of forced selling at a price lower than one paid in the previous six boom years.

The entirety of the housing and finance sector may be somewhat of a conundrum for the Fed, alternatively weighing higher energy and food prices (inflation) with lower base housing costs (deflation). There may still be some pressure for the Fed to ease rates in order to spur the housing industry, though that kind of thinking is more wishful than practical.

Bernanke and friends will probably take the easy route of holding the course and keeping rates unchanged at the next meeting as hiking rates could send stocks into a tailspin. Of course, there are many who contend that the Fed is in denial over inflationary pressure and that a short series of rate hikes would be the best medicine.

In the meantime, corporate profits continue to pour in mostly on the positive side providing plenty of rationale for continuation of the rally.

Monday, April 23, 2007

Manitoba Calling?

Wedged between the provinces of Ontario and Saskatchewan with a large Northern frontage on beautiful Hudson Bay, Manitoba is a naturalist's paradise. The province is the easternmost of Canada's three prairie provinces, replete with rolling hills, verdant forests and abundant wildlife.

Known as the land of 100,000 lakes, Lake Winnipeg, Lake Winnipegosis and Lake Manitoba are the three largest lakes. Forests of pine, hemlock and birch cover northern Manitoba with the Churchill, Nelson and Hayes Rivers flowing north into Hudson Bay.

All of these natural features make Manitoba one of Canada's most amenable vacation and getaway destinations. You can sell your Manitoba cottage free or find cottages and vacation homes for sale or rent, from high end, fully-featured second homes to condos, timeshares and mobile homes.

The name Manitoba comes from a Cree name meaning "the place where the spirit (manitou) speaks." At just over 250,000 square miles (a little larger than Texas and Oklahoma combined) a little more than 1 million people call Manitoba home, making it one of the more sparsely yet still habitable areas in the Northern Hemisphere.

The animal populace consists of large game, such as deer, elk, moose, caribou, black bear, and a wide variety of ducks, geese and other fowl. The lakes of Manitoba are world-renouned as some of the best fishing spots in the world.

For retirement or simply getting away from it all you can find the great properties - or sell yours. Maybe this custom built cottage on Lake Winnipeg is right for you.

We Will Drown in Barrels of Oil

The Dow streak was halted after three days of record closes on Monday as oil and gas shock hit the markets. Even the most well-heeled brokers and traders on Wall Street don't like gas at $3.00 a gallon, and for good reason. The high price of petro-energy threatens everything. The US economy - and to a large extent that of much of the civilized world - depends on fuel, not only for cars, but shipping, heating, cooling, industrial production and as a base element in many products.

The price of a barrel of light sweet crude ran up $1.78 to close at $65.89. The average price of a gallon of regular gas in the US, according to the most recent Lundberg Survey reached $2.87, and it's going higher.

Dow 12,919.40 -42.58; NASDAQ 2,523.67 -2.72; S&P 500 1,480.93 -3.42; NYSE Composite 9,660.56 -36.78

The big oil companies will be out with first quarter earnings reports this week. British Petroleum reports tomorrow, ExxonMobil on Thursday, Chevron on Friday. Expect gasps from the public, groans and grumblings from the monied class, and, of course, not a peep of derision from the complaisant wastrels otherwise known as our representatives in the US Congress. Big oil takes from all, but only greases the palms of legislators and others in the governing caste.

Nothing good can come from higher fuel prices unless you have a vested interest in the procurement, production or sale of those commodities. If anything can derail the economy all by itself, it's high energy costs, which have been a noticeable drag for the past two years at least.

If you're smart, you've already sold the SUV. If you're really smart and have some semblance of an environmental conscience, you've taken to
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walking or riding a bike - or motorized scooter - for short trips under one mile. Being that America has become the land of the fat, stupid and lazy, there aren't that many more bikes or scooters out there. We're doomed to drown either in debt, the cost of gas or from the coastal high tides of Global Warming.

It's all about the oil, the supposedly dwindling resource, even though almost nobody ever mentions the ongoing exploration, drilling and pipelining in North African nations by more than 70 companies. The Hubbard's Peak supply-demand scenario so frequently cited by the industry is a sham, an ersatz delusion perpetrated by the wealthy on the average and the poor. The more hand-wringing over global warming, the greater the demand for alternative fuels, the higher the price is likely to go. It's the unstoppable force of wealth, greed and power run amok.

To illustrate the illusory aspect of the oil scarcity argument, consider, on a day that oil rose nearly 3%, gold and silver - two elements which actually are scarce, barely budged. Silver rose 10 cents while gold lost $1.60 in value. Oil isn't scarce. The world is swimming in it and the oil barons are literally laughing all the way to the bank in armored limousines.

Volume on the exchanges today was close to average, with losers holding sway over winners by a slight margin of 5-4. New highs continue to flourish, with 474 of them as opposed to just 72 stocks making new lows. That imbalance is, and has been at the high range of historical charts.

If oil continues to rise in price, expect the market to react negatively, regardless of the quality of earnings being reported. Everyone and their brothers know that super high gas and oil prices are unsustainable in the long run and threaten to put an abrupt end to what has been a healthy run-up.