The wall of worry the market climbed all summer is quickly turing into a slippery slope of dissatisfaction, mostly with corporate earnings, and, over the past few days, the accelerating pace of layoffs, something the market hasn't dealt with in any size since 2010.
Stocks opened gap up, quickly decelerated and spent the majority of the session hugging the flat line. Only in the final 15 minutes did all of the indices turn sharply positive, if gains of 0.30% or so can be called sharp, though considering the growing number of earnings misses, is probably the best that could be expected.
There was a definite expression of waiting and hoping in the sentiment today, with few traders staking out new positions in advance of earnings releases by tech giants Amazon (AMZN) and Apple (APPL), both due out after the bell.
Amazon reported just minutes after the close of markets, putting up some god-awful numbers, short on revenue at 13.81 billion when the street was looking for 13.92, and a 23 cent loss ex-items on expectations of an eight-cent dip. Including one-time charges, Amazon's loss was 60 cents per share. Investors were not pleased and immediately sent the stock careering down seven percent in after hours trading.
Shortly thereafter, Apple reported earnings of $8.67 per share for its fiscal fourth quarter, less than the consensus estimate of $8.75. Revenues came in at $35.96 billion, above the $35.8 billion that analysts had sought. Share traded about one percent lower in extended trading.
Weakness in the two tech retailers was not entirely unexpected, though in Amazon's case, the loss was quite a bit on the downside, setting up for an interesting day Friday on the NASDAQ where both Amazon and Apple trade.
Dow 13,103.68, +26.34(0.20%)
NASDAQ 2,986.12, +4.42(0.15%)
S&P 500 1,412.97, +4.22(0.30%)
NYSE Composite 8,211.87, +32.61(0.40%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,846,098,130
NYSE Volume 3,447,291,500
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 3231-2256
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 141-98
WTI crude oil: 86.05, +0.32
Gold: 1,713.00, +11.40
Silver: 32.08, +0.458
Thursday, October 25, 2012
Wednesday, October 24, 2012
Dead Cats Don't Bounce; No Joy in Fraudville; Stocks Continue Slide
Maybe, as the movie title suggests, white men can't jump, but Wall Street proved today that dead cats don't bounce... at least not very high.
Stocks got a little bit of a boost from futures pumping prior to the opening bell, but the dismal nature of earnings for the third quarter made any gains transitory, fleeting and utterly disappointing (much like a lot of people in this author's life).
It is as it should be, perhaps. Fed policies do not a market make, so the major indices are now well below the levels encountered when the Chairman, the pseudo-salubrious Ben Bernanke, announced QE3, or, rather, QEtc. or QEternity on September 13.
The prescription the good doctor of economics gave the markets was unlimited buying of mortgage-backed securities (MBS), those ubiquitous instruments of mass financial destruction that essentially started the whole financial and economic mess in the first place, and which will, almost without doubt, end up worth less than what the Federal Reserve pays for them.
With any luck, the Fed's foray into economic wonderland, replete with diamond-farting unicorns and frogs that belch profits, will end in tears and anguish for not only the lower and middle classes, but the rich and self-appointed masters of the universe as well. We wish them no luck, because tactically, they have erred in their assessment of the global economy, not once or twice, but repeatedly since the advent of the crisis in 2007 or 2008, take your pick.
Today's FOMC rate policy decision was another non-event, the Fed reiterating that it would stick to its plans until 2015, which would be long after the chairman has departed, ostensibly in early 2014, should he even last that long.
The market is more interested these day in politics and earnings, each of which offering a mixed bag of blessings or banes, so precarious is the global outlook. Fears are rising that President Obama will win re-election, though the real fears are over the poor earnings reports pouring into the street like so many viperous snakes ready to bite the legs of impudent investors standing still.
Layoff announcements from Ford, Dow Chemical and Volkswagen were only whispered on Wall Street today. In the coming months, workforce reductions will be major headlines as all attempts to revive the economy the banks destroyed will ultimately fail. Europe is sinking steadily deeper into a black hole of debt and deflation, with Asia following soon, and the US - the last bastion of relief in a sea of declining opportunity - to join them in the hell of destroyed currencies and wrecked economies within short order.
Stocks have levitated for months, but the handwriting is clearly written and the game is nearly up. The US elections of November 6 mark a turning, a reckoning that will be absolute and without reprieve. All of the Merkels, Bernankes, Legardes and Draghis of the world cannot resurrect that which was already dead when they first took notice.
While there may be a few days of brightness ahead in the near future for stocks, to outlook continues to deteriorate and today's market action verifies the quietly-held beliefs of the skeptics: all is lost.
There is no joy in Fraudville; mighty Bernanke has struck out.
Dow 13,077.34, -25.19 (0.19%)
NASDAQ 2,981.70, -8.76 (0.29%)
S&P 500 1,408.75, -4.36 (0.31%)
NYSE Composite 8,179.26, -16.05 (0.20%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,965,715,000
NYSE Volume 3,346,029,500
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 2404-3120
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 97-94
WTI crude oil: 85.73, -0.94
Gold: 1,701.60, -7.80
Silver: 31.62, -0.173
Stocks got a little bit of a boost from futures pumping prior to the opening bell, but the dismal nature of earnings for the third quarter made any gains transitory, fleeting and utterly disappointing (much like a lot of people in this author's life).
It is as it should be, perhaps. Fed policies do not a market make, so the major indices are now well below the levels encountered when the Chairman, the pseudo-salubrious Ben Bernanke, announced QE3, or, rather, QEtc. or QEternity on September 13.
The prescription the good doctor of economics gave the markets was unlimited buying of mortgage-backed securities (MBS), those ubiquitous instruments of mass financial destruction that essentially started the whole financial and economic mess in the first place, and which will, almost without doubt, end up worth less than what the Federal Reserve pays for them.
With any luck, the Fed's foray into economic wonderland, replete with diamond-farting unicorns and frogs that belch profits, will end in tears and anguish for not only the lower and middle classes, but the rich and self-appointed masters of the universe as well. We wish them no luck, because tactically, they have erred in their assessment of the global economy, not once or twice, but repeatedly since the advent of the crisis in 2007 or 2008, take your pick.
Today's FOMC rate policy decision was another non-event, the Fed reiterating that it would stick to its plans until 2015, which would be long after the chairman has departed, ostensibly in early 2014, should he even last that long.
The market is more interested these day in politics and earnings, each of which offering a mixed bag of blessings or banes, so precarious is the global outlook. Fears are rising that President Obama will win re-election, though the real fears are over the poor earnings reports pouring into the street like so many viperous snakes ready to bite the legs of impudent investors standing still.
Layoff announcements from Ford, Dow Chemical and Volkswagen were only whispered on Wall Street today. In the coming months, workforce reductions will be major headlines as all attempts to revive the economy the banks destroyed will ultimately fail. Europe is sinking steadily deeper into a black hole of debt and deflation, with Asia following soon, and the US - the last bastion of relief in a sea of declining opportunity - to join them in the hell of destroyed currencies and wrecked economies within short order.
Stocks have levitated for months, but the handwriting is clearly written and the game is nearly up. The US elections of November 6 mark a turning, a reckoning that will be absolute and without reprieve. All of the Merkels, Bernankes, Legardes and Draghis of the world cannot resurrect that which was already dead when they first took notice.
While there may be a few days of brightness ahead in the near future for stocks, to outlook continues to deteriorate and today's market action verifies the quietly-held beliefs of the skeptics: all is lost.
There is no joy in Fraudville; mighty Bernanke has struck out.
Dow 13,077.34, -25.19 (0.19%)
NASDAQ 2,981.70, -8.76 (0.29%)
S&P 500 1,408.75, -4.36 (0.31%)
NYSE Composite 8,179.26, -16.05 (0.20%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,965,715,000
NYSE Volume 3,346,029,500
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 2404-3120
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 97-94
WTI crude oil: 85.73, -0.94
Gold: 1,701.60, -7.80
Silver: 31.62, -0.173
Labels:
banking,
Ben Bernanke,
crisis,
Dow,
Europe,
Ford,
New lows,
Volkswagen
Tuesday, October 23, 2012
Stocks Socked Again on Earnings, Revenue Misses
Today's decline had no end-of-day rally from which to save itself. Stocks were down from open to close, and hard, owing mostly to a continuing spate of earnings disappointments and negative guidance outlooks.
Today's main culprits were a trio of Dow components, DuPont (DD), 3M (MMM) and United Technologies (UTX), though DuPont was clearly the worst of the bunch, recording a third quarter profit of just one cent per share, far below analyst estimates of 46 cents per share.
That report, early in the morning, hours before the market opened, sent futures crashing, so that the Dow opened with a triple digit loss in the first minutes of trading. Stocks could not recover, as it is quickly becoming clear that corporate earnings and revenues are lacking - 60% of companies reporting thus far have missed revenue estimates, many of which have been radically lowered. Meanwhile, Europe's woes continue to weight on markets globally, as the bourses across the continent showed heavy losses again.
The race for president also added to investor dismay, the predominant thinking that President Obama clearly outclassed challenger Mitt Romney in Monday night's final debate, focused on foreign policy, an obvious weak spot for the Republican. According to the best guesses on investor sentiment concerning the election, an Obama victory would be bad for stocks, because Obama favors more regulation and higher taxes for high wage earners, while Romney would likely favor policies which generally leave the status quo alone, allowing the abuses of the rich to continue and the wealth gap to widen.
All politics aside, it is actually fundamentals - for a welcome change - that are driving the most recent declines. Companies are reporting an assortment of earnings misses and sour outlooks for the remainder of 2012 and 2013, based almost entirely on current conditions, which have consumers strapped, governments broke and debt levels for all, unsustainable.
Where stocks will go from here is unknown, though all of the major indices have broken below their 50-day moving averages, generally a sign of more bad days to come.
Additionally, the advance-decline line has deteriorated badly over the past week, as has new highs-new lows, finally capitulating, with new 52-week lows outpacing new highs, 129-53
Dow components reporting on Wednesday include AT&T (T) and Boeing (BA), just a pair in a slew of over 400 companies that will be reporting throughout the day. Both of the Dow components report prior to the market open.
The silver lining in the recent declines is the slump in oil and gas prices. Motorists are already seeing 12-15 cent reductions in the price of a gallon of regular gas, with more easing to come, as crude oil is in the midst of a severe mean reversion, which could bring the cost of a gallon of gas to below $3.00 in some areas.
A reduction in the price of gas could be just what the market needs in time for the holidays, critically important to markets and, well, kids.
Dow 13,102.53, -243.36 (1.82%)
NASDAQ 2,990.46, -26.50 (0.88%)
S&P 500 1,413.11, -20.71 (1.44%)
NYSE Composite 8,197.14, -132.05 (1.59%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,780,896,750
NYSE Volume 3,233,623,000
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 1709-3814
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 53-129
WTI crude oil: 86.67, -1.98
Gold: 1,709.40, -16.90
Silver: 31.79, -0.459
Today's main culprits were a trio of Dow components, DuPont (DD), 3M (MMM) and United Technologies (UTX), though DuPont was clearly the worst of the bunch, recording a third quarter profit of just one cent per share, far below analyst estimates of 46 cents per share.
That report, early in the morning, hours before the market opened, sent futures crashing, so that the Dow opened with a triple digit loss in the first minutes of trading. Stocks could not recover, as it is quickly becoming clear that corporate earnings and revenues are lacking - 60% of companies reporting thus far have missed revenue estimates, many of which have been radically lowered. Meanwhile, Europe's woes continue to weight on markets globally, as the bourses across the continent showed heavy losses again.
The race for president also added to investor dismay, the predominant thinking that President Obama clearly outclassed challenger Mitt Romney in Monday night's final debate, focused on foreign policy, an obvious weak spot for the Republican. According to the best guesses on investor sentiment concerning the election, an Obama victory would be bad for stocks, because Obama favors more regulation and higher taxes for high wage earners, while Romney would likely favor policies which generally leave the status quo alone, allowing the abuses of the rich to continue and the wealth gap to widen.
All politics aside, it is actually fundamentals - for a welcome change - that are driving the most recent declines. Companies are reporting an assortment of earnings misses and sour outlooks for the remainder of 2012 and 2013, based almost entirely on current conditions, which have consumers strapped, governments broke and debt levels for all, unsustainable.
Where stocks will go from here is unknown, though all of the major indices have broken below their 50-day moving averages, generally a sign of more bad days to come.
Additionally, the advance-decline line has deteriorated badly over the past week, as has new highs-new lows, finally capitulating, with new 52-week lows outpacing new highs, 129-53
Dow components reporting on Wednesday include AT&T (T) and Boeing (BA), just a pair in a slew of over 400 companies that will be reporting throughout the day. Both of the Dow components report prior to the market open.
The silver lining in the recent declines is the slump in oil and gas prices. Motorists are already seeing 12-15 cent reductions in the price of a gallon of regular gas, with more easing to come, as crude oil is in the midst of a severe mean reversion, which could bring the cost of a gallon of gas to below $3.00 in some areas.
A reduction in the price of gas could be just what the market needs in time for the holidays, critically important to markets and, well, kids.
Dow 13,102.53, -243.36 (1.82%)
NASDAQ 2,990.46, -26.50 (0.88%)
S&P 500 1,413.11, -20.71 (1.44%)
NYSE Composite 8,197.14, -132.05 (1.59%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,780,896,750
NYSE Volume 3,233,623,000
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 1709-3814
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 53-129
WTI crude oil: 86.67, -1.98
Gold: 1,709.40, -16.90
Silver: 31.79, -0.459
Labels:
3M,
crude oil,
DD,
Dow,
DuPont,
gas,
Mitt Romney,
President Obama,
UTX
Monday, October 22, 2012
Stocks Erase Losses in Final Hour, Again
Chartists, throw away all your tools and theories. Today, the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 100 points below its 200-day moving average, spent almost the entire day in negative territory - as did the S&P - yet both averages finished positive, wiping out the day's losses in the final hour of trading on absolutely no news, no rumors, nothing. The only thing that kept the NASDAQ afloat was Apple (APPL).
We've entered new territory, new levels of fraud and collusion and the politicization of markets.
It is an absolute sham. Casual and seasoned investors alike should have pulled all money out of these monkey markets long ago, but the repeated "savior" late day rallies are nothing but pure manipulation by insiders.
Corporate profits have been routinely weak this quarter, yet the major indices refuse to reflect reality in their prices. All price discovery mechanisms have been shattered by the continuous manipulation of markets since the crash of 2008.
Anyone wishing to hold the nearly-worthless pieces of paper (actually, now just electrons in some brokerage account) is welcome to them. The rest of us will do just fine with land, gold, silver and eventually, lead.
These markets deserve to roll over, correct, and eventually will, but that will only happen when the people behind the screens, pulling the strings, find such a move advantageous to their wishes.
Dow 13,345.89, +2.38 (0.02%)
NASDAQ 3,016.96, +11.34 (0.38%)
S&P 500 1,433.81, +0.62 (0.04%)
NYSE Composite 8,329.24, +5.09 (0.06%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,636,307,625
NYSE Volume 3,189,014,000
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 2668-2785
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 84-82
WTI crude oil: 88.73, -1.32
Gold: 1,726.30, +2.30
Silver: 32.25, +0.155
We've entered new territory, new levels of fraud and collusion and the politicization of markets.
It is an absolute sham. Casual and seasoned investors alike should have pulled all money out of these monkey markets long ago, but the repeated "savior" late day rallies are nothing but pure manipulation by insiders.
Corporate profits have been routinely weak this quarter, yet the major indices refuse to reflect reality in their prices. All price discovery mechanisms have been shattered by the continuous manipulation of markets since the crash of 2008.
Anyone wishing to hold the nearly-worthless pieces of paper (actually, now just electrons in some brokerage account) is welcome to them. The rest of us will do just fine with land, gold, silver and eventually, lead.
These markets deserve to roll over, correct, and eventually will, but that will only happen when the people behind the screens, pulling the strings, find such a move advantageous to their wishes.
Dow 13,345.89, +2.38 (0.02%)
NASDAQ 3,016.96, +11.34 (0.38%)
S&P 500 1,433.81, +0.62 (0.04%)
NYSE Composite 8,329.24, +5.09 (0.06%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,636,307,625
NYSE Volume 3,189,014,000
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 2668-2785
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 84-82
WTI crude oil: 88.73, -1.32
Gold: 1,726.30, +2.30
Silver: 32.25, +0.155
Friday, October 19, 2012
Reality Catching Up to Wall Street on Earnings Misses, Fears
Around June, this author told a particularly self-absorbed, furtive individual that there would be a market "event" shortly before the presidential election, designed to offer the impression that the economy, under president Obama, was failing in multitudinous ways, designed to usher in Mitt Romney as the next occupant of the White House.
Until today, that prediction seemed somewhat unreasonable, as stocks have risen sharply during the summer months, but, as third quarter earnings - in addition to various warnings from the likes of the IMF and World Bank - are proving, the US and global economies are far from what anyone would consider healthy.
Today's sharp sell-off was the product of many misses and warnings by huge multi-national companies that either missed earnings and/or revenue estimates or issued warnings for the months ahead.
Among those companies that fell short of Wall Street's lowered estimates after Thursday's close and prior to Friday's open were McDonald's (MCD), Microsoft (MSFT), Google (GOOG), high-flying Chipolte Mexican Grill (CMG), and General Electric (GE). The misses came behind similar poor showings from Intel (hit a 52-week low today) and IBM, earlier in the week and proved quite a few sell-side analysts correct in predicting that this quarter would be very rough from an earnings perspective.
Truth be told, even those companies beating earnings estimates are not beating by much, with some exceptions, and are generally hitting targets that are lower than the previous years numbers, which, as the market is a continuous-discounting mechanism, means stocks are going in reverse, with earnings falling, not growing.
That alone should explain today's deep, across-the-board, declines, but also brings into question the entire philosophy behind central bank easing and money printing on a global scale. Sure enough, easy money has propped up banks and companies and a multitude of stocks and indices, but the end result of funny fiat money always reverts to a point at which currencies become worthless and derivative instruments, such as stocks, and, further out, bonds, lose value and we could be nearing the conclusion of the failed stimulative experiment that's fixed nothing since the crash of 2008.
Speaking of crashes, today's drop pales by comparison to what occurred 25 years ago to the day, the well-known stock market crash of 1987, when the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell by 23%. It was a seminal market event that will probably (hopefully) never be repeated, as there are supposedly more safeguards and triggers - to say nothing of the PPT - to prevent such a disastrous one-day event.
That is not to say that markets, stocks and indices cannot fall hard over periods of time, though it is far too soon to call today's action the beginning of such a a downward spiral. However, with tech stocks and industrials feeling the heat from investors in an earnings season that has been short on enthusiasm and long on fear, the coming weeks, especially with the November elections as a backdrop, could produce some calamities such as have already been seen in individual stocks, many of which were grossly overvalued and highly speculative, Chipolte and Apple come immediately to mind.
Checking the charts, it's useful to point out that the Dow and S&P broke through their 50-day moving averages and closed just about right on them, a position last seen a week ago, before Monday and Tuesday's "savior" rallies pushed equities back to something of a triple top, which has now broken down in a dramatic reversal. Today's declines on the two indices were the worst since mid-June. Shortly thereafter, both indices progressed above their 50-day MA, but have now returned to the roost, setting up a very unsettling weekend and a potential breakdown on Monday or further on during the week.
As for the NASDAQ, today's worst percentage loser, that index has been screaming red for a month, having busted through its 50-day MA eight sessions ago. Any further deterioration in the beloved NAZ could trigger a serious correction, as it is already down 7% in the past month.
Looking ahead to next week, earnings reports are due out on some big names, such as Cattepillar (CAT), Las Vegas Sands (LVS), Yahoo (YHOO) and Texas Instruments (TXN) on Monday; 3M (MMM), Coach (COH), Facebook (FB) and United Parcel Service (UPS) on Tuesday; and, on Wednesday, Boeing (BA), Eli Lilly (LLY), General Dynamics (GD), Lockheed Martin (LMT) and O'Reilly Automotive (ORLY).
Those mentioned above are but a smattering of companies reporting, in what will be the busiest week of earnings season. CNBC and Bloomberg will be looking for rays of hope, while investors may have a more wary eye toward more companies missing on earnings and revenue.
One economic data point worth noting was existing home sales for September, falling 1.7% to an annual run rate of 4.75 million, well below most estimates.
Until then, the long weekend waiting game, and, on Monday night, the final presidential debate, followed on Wednesday another FOMC rate policy decision, which will probably be nothing more than a formality.
Naturally, there will be the usual can-kicking and posturing from Europe, which still cannot come up with plans for either Greece or Spain, which may or may not be part of the plan to hold off the bad news until after our elections. One can hardly wait.
That is all... for now.
Dow 13,343.51, -205.43 (1.52%)
NASDAQ 3,005.62, -67.25 (2.19%)
S&P 500 1,433.19, -24.15 (1.66%)
NYSE Composite 8,324.14, -118.68 (1.41%)
NASDAQ Volume 2,194,602,500.00
NYSE Volume 3,851,036,250
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 1168-4339
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 166-117
WTI crude oil: 90.05, -2.05
Gold: 1,724.00, -20.70
Silver: 32.10, -0.771
Until today, that prediction seemed somewhat unreasonable, as stocks have risen sharply during the summer months, but, as third quarter earnings - in addition to various warnings from the likes of the IMF and World Bank - are proving, the US and global economies are far from what anyone would consider healthy.
Today's sharp sell-off was the product of many misses and warnings by huge multi-national companies that either missed earnings and/or revenue estimates or issued warnings for the months ahead.
Among those companies that fell short of Wall Street's lowered estimates after Thursday's close and prior to Friday's open were McDonald's (MCD), Microsoft (MSFT), Google (GOOG), high-flying Chipolte Mexican Grill (CMG), and General Electric (GE). The misses came behind similar poor showings from Intel (hit a 52-week low today) and IBM, earlier in the week and proved quite a few sell-side analysts correct in predicting that this quarter would be very rough from an earnings perspective.
Truth be told, even those companies beating earnings estimates are not beating by much, with some exceptions, and are generally hitting targets that are lower than the previous years numbers, which, as the market is a continuous-discounting mechanism, means stocks are going in reverse, with earnings falling, not growing.
That alone should explain today's deep, across-the-board, declines, but also brings into question the entire philosophy behind central bank easing and money printing on a global scale. Sure enough, easy money has propped up banks and companies and a multitude of stocks and indices, but the end result of funny fiat money always reverts to a point at which currencies become worthless and derivative instruments, such as stocks, and, further out, bonds, lose value and we could be nearing the conclusion of the failed stimulative experiment that's fixed nothing since the crash of 2008.
Speaking of crashes, today's drop pales by comparison to what occurred 25 years ago to the day, the well-known stock market crash of 1987, when the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell by 23%. It was a seminal market event that will probably (hopefully) never be repeated, as there are supposedly more safeguards and triggers - to say nothing of the PPT - to prevent such a disastrous one-day event.
That is not to say that markets, stocks and indices cannot fall hard over periods of time, though it is far too soon to call today's action the beginning of such a a downward spiral. However, with tech stocks and industrials feeling the heat from investors in an earnings season that has been short on enthusiasm and long on fear, the coming weeks, especially with the November elections as a backdrop, could produce some calamities such as have already been seen in individual stocks, many of which were grossly overvalued and highly speculative, Chipolte and Apple come immediately to mind.
Checking the charts, it's useful to point out that the Dow and S&P broke through their 50-day moving averages and closed just about right on them, a position last seen a week ago, before Monday and Tuesday's "savior" rallies pushed equities back to something of a triple top, which has now broken down in a dramatic reversal. Today's declines on the two indices were the worst since mid-June. Shortly thereafter, both indices progressed above their 50-day MA, but have now returned to the roost, setting up a very unsettling weekend and a potential breakdown on Monday or further on during the week.
As for the NASDAQ, today's worst percentage loser, that index has been screaming red for a month, having busted through its 50-day MA eight sessions ago. Any further deterioration in the beloved NAZ could trigger a serious correction, as it is already down 7% in the past month.
Looking ahead to next week, earnings reports are due out on some big names, such as Cattepillar (CAT), Las Vegas Sands (LVS), Yahoo (YHOO) and Texas Instruments (TXN) on Monday; 3M (MMM), Coach (COH), Facebook (FB) and United Parcel Service (UPS) on Tuesday; and, on Wednesday, Boeing (BA), Eli Lilly (LLY), General Dynamics (GD), Lockheed Martin (LMT) and O'Reilly Automotive (ORLY).
Those mentioned above are but a smattering of companies reporting, in what will be the busiest week of earnings season. CNBC and Bloomberg will be looking for rays of hope, while investors may have a more wary eye toward more companies missing on earnings and revenue.
One economic data point worth noting was existing home sales for September, falling 1.7% to an annual run rate of 4.75 million, well below most estimates.
Until then, the long weekend waiting game, and, on Monday night, the final presidential debate, followed on Wednesday another FOMC rate policy decision, which will probably be nothing more than a formality.
Naturally, there will be the usual can-kicking and posturing from Europe, which still cannot come up with plans for either Greece or Spain, which may or may not be part of the plan to hold off the bad news until after our elections. One can hardly wait.
That is all... for now.
Dow 13,343.51, -205.43 (1.52%)
NASDAQ 3,005.62, -67.25 (2.19%)
S&P 500 1,433.19, -24.15 (1.66%)
NYSE Composite 8,324.14, -118.68 (1.41%)
NASDAQ Volume 2,194,602,500.00
NYSE Volume 3,851,036,250
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 1168-4339
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 166-117
WTI crude oil: 90.05, -2.05
Gold: 1,724.00, -20.70
Silver: 32.10, -0.771
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